It's particularly bad when it comes to treating women.
Doctors tend to believe that female patients exaggerate pain in comparison to male patients, in accordance with stereotypes that portray men as "stoic" and women as "emotional". The bias is systemic, with female doctors often assuming the stereotype too[1].
You can trace this bias back through medical literature which (often subconsciously) reiterates these stereotypes[2]. It shows up in many statistics, such as the difference in wait times for analgesics: women reporting pain had to wait an average of 30% longer than men.[3]
But a key cause of the problem is worse than just assumption of stereotypes: it's that modern medicine still knows far more about men than it does women. For centuries, the primary medical research and literature was done by men, about men, for the treatment of men. Most of the clinical trials performed in the 20th century enrolled far fewer women than men, and often _none at all_.[4]
Of course, gender is not the only bias that shows up in medicine. Age, race, (dis)ability, body shape, and economic/social status are all useful factors to keep in mind when considering why certain people, even entire sectors of society, aren't getting the treatment they should.
Doctors tend to believe that female patients exaggerate pain in comparison to male patients, in accordance with stereotypes that portray men as "stoic" and women as "emotional". The bias is systemic, with female doctors often assuming the stereotype too[1].
You can trace this bias back through medical literature which (often subconsciously) reiterates these stereotypes[2]. It shows up in many statistics, such as the difference in wait times for analgesics: women reporting pain had to wait an average of 30% longer than men.[3]
But a key cause of the problem is worse than just assumption of stereotypes: it's that modern medicine still knows far more about men than it does women. For centuries, the primary medical research and literature was done by men, about men, for the treatment of men. Most of the clinical trials performed in the 20th century enrolled far fewer women than men, and often _none at all_.[4]
Of course, gender is not the only bias that shows up in medicine. Age, race, (dis)ability, body shape, and economic/social status are all useful factors to keep in mind when considering why certain people, even entire sectors of society, aren't getting the treatment they should.
- [1] https://www.dovepress.com/the-roles-of-gender-and-profession... - [2] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5845507/ - [3] https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1553-2712... - [4] https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/nov/13/the-fem...