Medical misogyny
This is an investigative series by The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald into medical misogyny. We will explore how this happens in Australia, look at the impacts on women and share the best ideas to address it.
Investigation
‘These mistakes cost lives’: The medical bias that affects half of Australia
Nikki Purtill was lucky to survive an undiagnosed cyst on her brain. Her experience is part of the under-researched phenomenon of medical misogyny.
- by Aisha Dow, Wendy Tuohy, Emily Kaine and Kate Aubusson
At 31, Kirsty had just been pregnant – but she suddenly faced a ‘brutal’ reality
The months-long “medical limbo” Kirsty Costa fell into while trying to get a diagnosis has now helped to inform new guidelines for doctors.
- by Wendy Tuohy
Investigation
‘I thought I was insane’: Doctors kept ignoring Keira’s pain. It almost killed her
Keira Rumble was a victim of a poorly researched health phenomenon known as medical misogyny. Its consequences can be fatal.
- by Kate Aubusson and Wendy Tuohy
Opinion
‘We offer anaesthetic but only men need it’: The persistent myth about pain
Do women or men have a higher threshold for pain? It’s a question that raises a number of problems with Australia’s medical system.
- by Wendy Tuohy
Investigation
‘It’s all in your head’: How medical gender bias affects Australian women
What is medical misogyny? How do we know it exists? Our reporters reveal the background to this series for the Morning Edition podcast.
Investigation
‘Almost killed me’: 1000 women dismissed, left in pain and misdiagnosed
More than a thousand women have shared their disturbing encounters with the medical system as part of an investigation into medical misogyny.
- by Carrie Fellner and Emily Kaine
Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/medical-misogyny-20241204-p5kvq7.html