Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Gaslighting Doctors Make It Harder For Women With Long Covid

Medical misogyny and gaslighting is having an impact on women seeking medical support for long Covid symptoms.

Women seeking medical support for long Covid found health care providers often dismissed their symptoms. (Engin Akyurt/Unsplash)

By Gülcan Garip, University of Derby

DERBY, Feb 22 – For middle-aged women, long Covid is a difficult enough condition to endure as it is without having to put up with gaslighting — having their symptoms diminished or dismissed — by doctors when they seek treatment.

One study of women seeking medical attention for long Covid revealed the impact of medical misogyny and gaslighting on middle-aged women’s confidence and wellbeing as they accessed medical support for their long Covid symptoms.

“GPs weren’t helpful at all, not at all and said: ‘Are you sure it’s not anxiety?'” one woman in her late 50s told researchers.

“I’ve never suffered from anxiety, and I still don’t.”

Another woman, aged 50, found doctor appointments to be invalidating: “The doctors cannot help you. They actually make you worse because they make your stress worse by saying it’s in your head.”

Long Covid usually develops three months after the initial infection. Symptoms such as fatigue, shortness of breath, cognitive dysfunction and around 200 others, last at least two months. There are no specific treatments or vaccines.

Up to 20 per cent of people infected with Covid-19 may develop long Covid.

The research came about because there was a gap in knowledge of how women who developed long Covid during the first wave of Covid — from March 2020 — were managing their symptoms.

Nine women, eight from England and one from Poland, discussed their medical care, which they reported as mostly being negative.

Medical gaslighting is the process of diminishing or dismissing the physical or mental health symptoms of a patient by a health care provider.

A patient may be told their symptoms are in their head or given a vague explanation leaving them without a treatment plan or diagnosis. 

The women reported being mistreated when attempting to ask for medical support for their long Covid symptoms. They also felt their health concerns were not being prioritised or taken seriously.

One woman who had attended a long Covid clinic, said she noticed sexist, ageist and discriminatory assumptions were made about her being a woman over 40 — with health care providers assuming her symptoms were due to menopause.

Her experience is an example of gaslighting — which can involve doctors telling a patient their symptoms are in their head, giving a vague explanation, and leaving them without a treatment plan or diagnosis.

Gaslighting can also lead to genuine symptoms and diagnoses being overlooked because medical staff dismiss women as emotional, dramatic and “hysterical”.

There is a long history of women’s health care being classified as hysteria – although the diagnosis has now been replaced with “medically unexplained symptoms”

This label has been applied to unexplainable and chronic health conditions in women’s health care such as chronic fatigue syndrome and long Covid.

Some research papers point to medical misogyny as they highlight the many ways in which women who experience pain are often viewed by the medical establishment as hysterical, malingerers, not helping themselves to get better or fabricating the pain.

One woman in the study pointed to language used in scientific research as an example of these sexist assumptions.

“You have some people who are studying long Covid, usually, unfortunately from the psychological side, will start talking about things like neurasthenia or hysteria,” said the woman, in her late 40s.

“This is very misogynist language.”

Eliminating medical misogyny and medical gaslighting is no small feat, but there are some obvious places to start. 

As medical research is mostly based on male biology in clinical studies, researchers can play a key role by including more women in their studies.

Offering mindfulness interventions may support women with long Covid. While not a cure, mindfulness can play a role in helping sufferers manage debilitating symptoms including fatigue and unrefreshing sleep.

Crucially, doctors can also commit to listening to female patients. Women know their own bodies and when something feels off. It can be empowering for a woman to trust their instinct and to advocate for their health and to ask for a second opinion when necessary.

This research suggests all health care providers need to validate women’s health concerns when they are trying to access care for long Covid.

This would reduce discrimination and misogynistic practices, as well as helping women access the support they need.

Gülcan Garip is the programme co-lead for the MSc Psychology programme at the University of Derby. 

Article courtesy of 360info. 

You May Also Like

Opinion

Dr Bheena Vyshali debunks the myth that pelvic floor exercises are only appropriate for postpartum women, arguing that women of all ages should perform...

Malaysia

When his wife, Norzey Md Nata, became unconscious for a whole month and then bed-ridden for a year-and-a-half after she suffered from a relapse...

World

More and more children are growing up with robots at home, but their impact on early learning and development is still largely unknown and...

Malaysia

The campaign aims to promote prediabetes screening, diagnosis, and management to prevent progression to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.