Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Implicit bias prevents women from obtaining prompt treatment for health problems

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — For some women who experience serious and chronic physical or mental health conditions, one of their most daunting challenges is obtaining the belief and validation of health care providers, family members and friends, researchers found in a recent study.

Those in the study described prolonged struggles to obtain emotional support, diagnosis and treatment for a variety of serious, often-painful health conditions – including cancer, endometriosis, multiple sclerosis and Crohn’s disease, as well as mental illnesses such as depression and anxiety that were exacerbated by others’ negative reactions, said Charee Thompson, the first author of the study and a professor of communication at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

“Most women we talked to had lived with their health issues and pain for years,” said Thompson. She and her co-authors – U. of I. graduate students Sara Babu and Shana Makos – interviewed 36 women from across the U.S. about their experiences with providers not taking their health concerns seriously and regarding the mental and physical toll it took.

“Most of them were in their 20s, 30s or older, and oftentimes their mental or reproductive health issues started when they were adolescents. We’re talking decades of neglect or undertreatment,” Thompson said. “One thing that was surprising and frankly heartbreaking was the personal rejection and sometimes the abuse that women experienced because of their health problems.”

Although the study population of 36 was small, the researchers said the women’s experiences reflect a form of implicit bias, discrimination and disempowerment that women have faced for centuries.

The team called these negative responses to participants’ health disclosures “communicative disenfranchisement” – a process that denies individuals’ knowledge of their health and bodies, and treats their symptoms, experiences and intersecting identities such as race and sexual orientation as nonexistent, imaginary or worthless.

Also known as medical gaslighting, communicative disenfranchisement “is an isolating, painful and humiliating experience that is sustained by talk from physicians and others that’s often intertwined with economic factors such as insurance status and transportation,” Thompson said.

University of Connecticut communication professor Elizabeth Hintz developed the theory of communicative disenfranchisement while studying the experiences of patients with multiple pain syndromes.

Ranging in age from 21-70, the majority of the participants in the current study were white. Six of the women were Black and the remaining three were Filipina, Hispanic or Middle Eastern. However, eight of the participants said they were multiracial.

When these women’s concerns were invalidated by their health care providers, they attributed their clinicians’ discrediting them to their race and economic or insurance status, according to the study.

Those whose mental health or reproductive health problems began during childhood or adolescence said their parents’ skepticism about their health problems, their family’s conservative values or lack of economic resources prevented them from obtaining the health care they needed until they became adults or entered college.

Study participants recounted experiences with clinicians who shamed or scolded them for their physical and mental health issues, made humiliating remarks about their bodies and weight, and attributed their health issues to “poor self-management and a personal failure to be doctorable – to present problems in ways that are worthy of medical care and attention,” the team wrote.

Many patients’ stories resembled “chaos narratives” where their well-being was negatively affected rather than improved by their interactions with providers. Each patient in the study told the team she saw several physicians before locating someone who listened to her concerns, engaged in mutual decision-making and helped her search for answers.

“Reeling from dismissal, women often disengaged from health care while simultaneously questioning themselves and trying to self-manage their symptoms,” the researchers wrote. “Isolated, women wondered if their symptoms were real, worthy of attention and care, and whether receiving this kind of treatment from providers was normal.”

Feeling dehumanized and traumatized, these patients grieved for the years and life experiences such as motherhood and careers lost to poor health, the team found. However, as they developed confidence in their self-knowledge and found their voices, many women were motivated by these injustices to advocate for others in their families or their community.

“I really admired these women for their strength and resilience,” Thompson said.

During the 18th and 19th centuries, women’s health complaints were often diagnosed as “hysteria” – a controversial mental health disorder and catchall diagnosis that physicians attributed to females’ supposed fragile, highly emotional nature, according to various researchers who explored the topic.

While hysteria was removed from the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders in 1980, Thompson said “we now have coded, gendered language such as psychosomatic and somatoform disorders – where emotional distress triggers physical issues – that’s used when there’s no medical explanation for patients’ symptoms.”

Mitigating these biases requires that providers have cultural knowledge – including an understanding of patients’ intersectional gender and sexual identities as well as race – along with an awareness of their values and beliefs, Thompson said.

“The automatic response should be to believe women – before landing on a diagnosis or having confirmation bias, where you make a diagnosis and there’s nothing that moves you from it,” Thompson said. “To really listen to women means you do more listening than talking.”

Editor’s notes: To reach Charee Thompson, call 217-300-7939; email charee@illinois.edu

The paper “Women’s experiences of health-related communicative disenfranchisement” is available online or from the News Bureau.

DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2022.2137772

Read Next

Expert Viewpoints Kelvin Droegemeier, a man with glasses and an orange shirt.

What’s the state of the research landscape?

Academic research is a public good that reflects American values, says University of Illinois science policy expert Kelvin Droegemeier.

Expert Viewpoints Humanities Headshot of English professor and department head Justine S. Murison

At 250 years after Jane Austen’s birth, why do her novels remain so popular?

This week marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth — she was born Dec. 16, 1775 — and fans of her novels have been celebrating with tea parties, brunches and balls. Her novels — including “Sense and Sensibility,” “Pride and Prejudice” and “Emma” — enjoy immense popularity. They are the subject of numerous academic […]

Expert Viewpoints Headshot of Shannon Mason, standing outside in front of a tree and wearing a hot pink blazer.

What can we learn about our country’s origins from ‘The American Revolution’ documentary?

Filmmaker Ken Burns’ new documentary — a six-part series on the American Revolution — aired on PBS in November and is now streaming. The documentary describes the American Revolution as “a war for independence, a war of conquest, a civil war and a world war,” and it aims to provide “an expansive, evenhanded look at […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010