Gender Bias in Health Care Makes Patients Feel Unheard
Gender Bias in Health Care Makes Patients Feel Unheard
Studies have shown that there are significant gender disparities in health care. In fact, women are less likely than men to receive proper treatment because the system simply doesn’t understand their biology. This means their symptoms are typically minimized due to overarching implicit bias.Just one study found that, “Health needs were substantially greater among older women compared with men, but women had fewer economic resources. Controlling for health needs did little to explain gender differences in preventive care and increased gender differences in the use of hospital services…In contrast, the greater use of home health care among women was almost entirely explained by their greater health needs.” This seems to suggest a disconnect in important conversational interactions.Other studies have found that even when men and women talk about their symptoms and they are nearly identical, women are more treated differently than their counterparts. Implicit bias among health care professionals needs to be identified, acknowledged, and addressed in to address disparities in the care patients receive.
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Sources:
Why 50/50 Gender Representation Matters in HealthcareImplicit bias in healthcare professionals: a systematic review
About Sara E. Teller
Sara is a credited freelance writer, editor, contributor, and essayist, as well as a novelist and poet with nearly twenty years of experience. A seasoned publishing professional, she's worked for newspapers, magazines and book publishers in content digitization, editorial, acquisitions and intellectual property. Sara has been an invited speaker at a Careers in Publishing & Authorship event at Michigan State University and a Reading and Writing Instructor at Sylvan Learning Center. She has an MBA degree with a concentration in Marketing and an MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, graduating with a 4.2/4.0 GPA. She is also a member of Chi Sigma Iota and a 2020 recipient of the Donald D. Davis scholarship recognizing social responsibility. Sara is certified in children's book writing, HTML coding and social media marketing. Her fifth book, PTSD: Healing from the Inside Out, was released in September 2019 and is available on Amazon. You can find her others books there, too, including Narcissistic Abuse: A Survival Guide, released in December 2017.