Women's Health Has a Shaky Foundation in Medicine

Women's Health Has a Shaky Foundation in Medicine

“If you are having a stroke, there is about a 9 percent chance you will be misdiagnosed in the ER — a statistic that applies to all age groups when the patient is seen initially in the ER. But if you are young, female, a person of color or have limited education (less than a high school degree), your risk of misdiagnosis soars,” according to one expert cited in this article from the Washington Post. For women, apparently, that risk is a whopping 30% higher than the norm.

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"Maybe You're Just Someone with Blood in their Urine"

 "Maybe You're Just Someone with Blood in their Urine"

A quick and memorable read about a woman who persisted in her search for a medical explanation where doctors and imaging were turning up none. Had she not, she would likely have died from an aggressive form of kidney cancer, a diagnosis made more difficult by the fact that she didn’t “fit'“ the profile of the typical patient.

“What I definitely wish I had done was bring in pictures or a sample of bloody urine early on,” she said. “Somehow I think doctors believe patients when there is something visible or tangible, rather than just our words.”



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Money Can’t Buy Me Love…Or Health

Money Can’t Buy Me Love…Or Health

Money has everything and nothing to do with health. It’s a leading indicator of life expectancy, it can keep people on life support medical equipment for days, weeks, months and years, it can pay premiums, doctors, hospitals and pharmacies, but in our system of healthcare, it can’t buy the things that work best at keeping people healthy. Adding insult to injury, the way you think of your own health likely has little to do with how your specialist, insurance company and perhaps even your regular doctor or nurse sees you.

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