Join now

Already a member? Sign in

Welcome to Inspire!

What - Inspire is a place where you can connect with people who share your health concerns and find information and advice in groups sponsored by organizations you know and trust.

Why - As a member you can use Inspire to let friends and family know how you're doing, contact others who share your health concerns, receive personalized updates and information about participating in surveys and clinical trials, and more.

How - Joining Inspire is completely free and usually takes less than a minute. Join now!

corner corner corner

Missing the Beat: Are Doctors Ignoring Women?

0 Recommendations

Having experienced every single medical side fandango listed below, it is not reassuring to see the trend is vastly widespread....still.

Missing the Beat: Are Doctors Ignoring Women?
The female heart often is misdiagnosed
By: Laura Flynn McCarthy


Reviewed By: Kerry Prewitt, M.D., FACC



True or false: Every year, more women die of heart disease than men.

The answer is true, but if you didn’t know it, you’re not the only one. In a survey of 500 physicians led by preventative cardiologist Lori Mosca, M.D, Ph.D., less than 20 percent knew the answer.

When it comes to women and heart disease, ignorance can be deadly. The misconception that heart disease is a “man’s disease” is the main reason women are misdiagnosed, or receive delayed treatment, when experiencing symptoms of heart disease and even a heart attack.

Consider these findings:

In a recent study at Weill Medical College of Cornell University/New York-Presbyterian Hospital, 230 physicians were given hypothetical cases of men and women with identical symptoms of heart disease. Half of the case studies included reports that the patient recently had a stressful experience or felt anxious. When this detail was included, doctors diagnosed heart disease in 56 percent of men compared with just 18 percent of women. They referred men to cardiologists twice as often as women, and prescribed cardiac medications to almost half of the men, versus a paltry 13 percent of the women. Researchers concluded that in the presence of stress or anxiety, symptoms such as chest pain and shortness of breath were more likely to be attributed to anxiety in women but seen as potential signs of heart disease in men.


Another study at Tufts Medical Center in Boston found that among people who called 911 complaining of cardiac symptoms, women were 52 percent more likely than men to experience delays during emergency medical service care, a potentially critical difference because treatments for a heart attack are typically most effective when given within 1 to 2 hours of the start of the attack.
“We often hear women patients say that their complaints were dismissed or that they were ‘blown off’ by their doctors when they presented with heart disease symptoms," says Lori Mosca, M.D., Ph.D., director of preventive cardiology at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and professor of medicine at Columbia University Medical Center. "Studies show that there is a gender bias out there that women need to be aware of. Our own research has shown that physicians are likely to label a woman at lower risk for heart disease than a man who has the exact same calculated level of heart disease risk.”

So how can you protect yourself? Dr. Mosca offers these suggestions:

Know your risks for heart disease, like your waist size, smoking and exercise habits, blood pressure and cholesterol levels. If you smoke, quit. Talk to your doctor about diet and exercise changes you can make to lower your risks, and, if appropriate, medications that might help you. Try this quick test at home: Wrap a tape measure around your waist right at the level of your belly button (don’t suck in your stomach). If your waistline measures 35 inches or more, you are more likely to have high cholesterol, high blood pressure, pre-diabetes and an increased risk of dying of heart disease than a woman with a normal waist size.


Knowing your family’s history of heart disease is important because if you have a close relative with heart disease or diabetes, you are at higher risk for these conditions, too. Even if you don’t have symptoms of heart disease, having a strong family history – particularly if a parent died at a young age of a heart attack – may be enough reason to be checked early to catch problems that may not yet be causing symptoms. In 40 percent of people that develop heart disease, sudden death is the first symptom.


Learn the unique symptoms of heart disease in women. Chest pain is the most common symptom of heart problems in both men and women, but women are much more likely to also experience subtle symptoms such as headaches, nausea and upset stomach, jaw or neck pain, shortness of breath and generalized fatigue.


Get help immediately. “Research shows that women tend to call for help later than men do, possibly because they don’t recognize these atypical symptoms as signaling heart troubles, or possibly because their tolerance for pain is greater,” says Dr. Mosca. If you have symptoms and think you might be having a heart attack or stroke, don’t delay; call 911.


Have a checkup annually. Report any suspicious symptoms and don’t let your doctor dismiss your concerns. If you have two or more risk factors and you are over the age of 50, a stress test can give more clues to your heart health. If the stress test shows signs of potential heart problems, further tests can be ordered.


Get a second opinion. If you feel your doctor is not taking your concerns seriously don’t hesitate to find a new doctor.

http://yourtotalhealth.ivillage.com/missing-beat-are-doctors-ignoring-women .html?nlcid=hr|11-06-2009|

5 replies

Beautiful stated. I wholeHEARTEDly agree !!

Hi Jaynie! No surprises there yet again, are these physicians just a bunch of male chauvinist pigs?

"Half of the case studies included reports that the patient recently had a stressful experience or felt anxious. When this detail was included, doctors diagnosed heart disease in 56 percent of men compared with just 18 percent of women."
Here's an excerpt from another study:
The rapid pulse and shortness of breath of a panic attack can feel like a heart attack, and it may signal heart trouble down the road, a study of more than 3,000 older women suggests.
Women who reported at least one full-blown panic attack during a six-month period were three times more likely to have a heart attack or stroke over the next five years than women who didn't report a panic attack.
The researchers took into account other risk factors such as smoking, high blood pressure, inactivity and depression and still found that panic attacks raised risk.

It's pretty common knowledge that stress is bad for PEOPLE when it comes to heart health, you'd think that knowing a patient has recently had a stressful experience would make the medics likely to suspect a heart attack in either sex, this is discrimination of the very worst kind.
Lidia xx

"Here's an excerpt from another study:
The rapid pulse and shortness of breath of a panic attack can feel like a heart attack, and it may signal heart trouble down the road, a study of more than 3,000 older women suggests."

I've never had a panic attack, only heart attacks....but panic attacks must be terribly scary to live through. The only folks I know who have panic attacks are males, not women. I never understand why these studies targer 'older women'.

thanks for the info Lidia!
Jaynie

Last week on our local AM show, the head cardiologist from our major heart center was on. I sat there with my mouth hanging open in shock as he said to a woman caller, "It is very rare for a young woman to have heart disease so don't worry about it. Women don't tend to have problems until their 60's." WHAAATTTTTT????? He is my cardio's boss!!!! I wasn't in a place where I could call the station & until I caught this post I kind of blocked it out (Now my shock is back full force) but I couldn't believe that comment was made to a mid-sized metro area. At least he had the symptom differences right but still.... Cardiac Chauvanism (sp?) alive & well in Buffalo, NY.

Amy

Well I can tell you first hand that my health care changed significantly when I changed from the local all boys club to the womans heart care group which is run by none other than a woman. It was put in place by herself and a couple other health care providers for just the reasons you are quoting. They are a part of a larger practice in which my husband was a part of before I joined him in having heart problems, he sees a male MD but I opted to see Dr.Deb.

His problems are different than mine but we still get the care we need via this "combined" practice.

Jayne thanks for posting this very important info and it may be a good time to remind folks if you are not happy with the care you are getting speak up or seek out another practice.

be well, denise

Add to the discussion

Don't have an Inspire account? Join now!

Forgot password?

Group leaders

You