The Silent Epidemic: How the Medical System Lets Women Down

by Feb 13, 2025

There’s a particular moment that tends to repeat itself, although it doesn’t always look the same on the surface. A woman sits in a doctor’s office trying to explain what's happening in her body, and somewhere in the exchange—sometimes subtly, sometimes quite directly—her certainty in herself begins to shift.She wonders if it's something she might be exaggerating, misinterpreting, or imagining. The phrase changes depending on the context, but the effect is consistent.

It’s all in your head.

It would be easy to treat this as a series of individual failures—bad doctors, missed diagnoses, unfortunate experiences—but the pattern is too consistent for that to hold. Something else is operating underneath it.

The assumption that never quite gets questioned

For a long time, medical research has been organised around a particular assumption, which is that the male body can stand in for the human body as a whole, and that what applies to one can be generalised to the other without significant consequence5, and that assumption has shaped everything downstream.

Clinical trials historically excluded women, with symptoms being defined based on male presentation5, and treatment protocols were built on that foundation and then extended outward, as though the differences were minor rather than structural, and because of that, the gap doesn’t always appear immediately—it shows up in the margins.

Women in acute pain waiting longer in emergency rooms before receiving treatment1. Heart attack symptoms being misread because they don’t follow the expected pattern2. Conditions such as endometriosis and polycystic ovarian syndrome taking years, sometimes close to a decade, to be diagnosed3, while patients are told to manage, to wait, or to accept that nothing more can be done, and none of this sits as a single failure, instead it accumulates.

What gets recognised, and what doesn’t

Once you begin to look at it this way, the idea that women’s health is simply “underfunded” or “overlooked” starts to feel slightly incomplete, because it suggests a gap that could be closed without changing the structure that produced it.

But the structure itself is doing something more specific—it’s deciding what counts as a reliable body of knowledge, and what doesn’t.

Following on from that, research funding follows that decision4, as does clinical attention, and credibility.

Which means that certain conditions are treated as urgent, measurable, and worth solving, while others are treated as ambiguous, subjective, or peripheral, regardless of their impact, and once that hierarchy is in place, it tends to reproduce itself.

The result isn’t simply that women are occasionally dismissed, it’s that dismissal becomes predictable—not exactly inevitable, but certainly patterned.

Where the responsibility quietly shifts

This is often where the conversation shifts toward individual advocacy, because the proposed solution tends to centre on what women can do differently—ask more questions, seek second opinions, push harder for answers—and while those responses are understandable, they sit slightly uneasily alongside the scale of the problem.

Because they assume that the system itself is functioning, and that the issue is access to it, rather than the way it is structured, and that distinction matters.

Following the pattern outward

The same pattern appears when you follow it outward.

Funding disparities between conditions that primarily affect men and those that primarily affect women do not simply reflect oversight; they reflect prioritisation4.

Reproductive health policies, particularly in countries where access is restricted, don’t emerge in isolation; they sit within a broader framework that regulates whose bodies are subject to control and whose aren’t8,9,10,11.

Healthcare access itself follows similar lines, where systems that are tied to income disproportionately affect those already navigating structural disadvantage, and where universal healthcare models tend to produce different outcomes not because the populations are fundamentally different, but because the underlying assumptions about access have shifted6.

Once the pattern becomes visible

At that point, the question becomes less about individual experiences, and more about the pattern those experiences form when placed side by side, because once the pattern is visible, it becomes difficult to describe what is happening as accidental, and if it’s not accidental, then the question changes again.

It changes not to what went wrong in a particular consultation, or why a diagnosis was delayed, but why the system continues to produce the same outcome across different contexts, different practitioners, and different conditions.

What the system is actually doing

There is a tendency to frame this as something that will correct itself over time, as awareness increases and more women enter the field, and while change is certainly possible, it’s not something that happens independently of the structures that shape it, because those structures aren’t neutral.

They determine what is studied, what is funded, what is believed, and what is dismissed, which leaves something slightly uncomfortable sitting underneath all of this.

If the pattern is consistent, and if the structure producing it has not fundamentally shifted, then the expectation that individual effort alone will resolve it starts to look less convincing.

The question that remains

And that’s usually the point where the conversation becomes more difficult to contain, because it moves beyond the question of whether women are being heard, and into the question of how the system decides what’s worth hearing in the first place.

Footnotes and Research References

  1. Medical Gaslighting and Gender Bias in Pain Treatment
  2. Heart Attack Symptoms in Women
  3. Endometriosis Diagnosis Delays
  4. Funding Disparities in Medical Research
    • Conditions like endometriosis receive far less funding compared to conditions that primarily affect men. For example, endometriosis research receives a fraction of the funding allocated to erectile dysfunction research.
    • Source: As-Sanie, S., et al. (2019). “Research Priorities for Endometriosis: Recommendations from a Global Consortium of Investigators in Endometriosis.” Reproductive Sciences.
    • ↩ back to first citation | ↩ back to second citation
  5. Gender Bias in Clinical Trials
  6. Universal Healthcare and Women’s Health Outcomes
    • Countries with universal healthcare systems tend to have better health outcomes for women, including lower maternal mortality rates and better access to preventive care.
    • Source: World Health Organization (WHO). (2020). “Universal Health Coverage and Gender Equality.”
    • ↩ back to citation
  7. Advocacy for Women’s Health Policy
  8. U.S. Abortion Bans Post-Roe v. Wade
  9. Poland’s Abortion Ban
  10. Global Trends in Reproductive Rights
  11. Impact of Abortion Restrictions on Women’s Health

About the author

Estelle330
Founder and Editor at  | Website |  + posts

Estelle is the Editor and Founder of Smart Healthy Women Magazine. Founded online in 2013, SHW began as a wellness publication and evolved, over more than a decade, into a feminist political magazine, covering the health, economic, and political conditions shaping women's lives in a world that increasingly demands honest writing about both. SHW has published 677 articles and 56 themed digital issues featuring the work of more than 300 women writers.

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About the author

Founder and Editor at  | Website |  + posts

Estelle is the Editor and Founder of Smart Healthy Women Magazine. Founded online in 2013, SHW began as a wellness publication and evolved, over more than a decade, into a feminist political magazine, covering the health, economic, and political conditions shaping women's lives in a world that increasingly demands honest writing about both. SHW has published 677 articles and 56 themed digital issues featuring the work of more than 300 women writers.

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