Why Women’s Pain Is Ignored — And Why It Matters More Than You Think
Description
Why do women in emergency rooms wait up to 30 minutes longer than men to receive pain relief? And why are women’s symptoms still dismissed as “emotional,” “unclear,” or “overreacting”—even today?
In this powerful episode of NUGGETS, Pellegrino and Francois dive into the science and story behind one of the biggest credibility gaps in modern healthcare: gender bias in pain.
From ER research on 20,000+ patients to the staggering fact that most medical trials historically used only male bodies, we uncover why women’s pain is consistently downplayed — and how that delay leads to slower recovery, more complications, and more chronic pain.
We explore:
- Why both male and female doctors prescribe less pain relief to women
- How nurses underrate women’s pain scores
- Why women’s symptoms get labelled as “atypical”
- The emotional load of not being believed
- The biology behind self-censoring pain
- What needs to change — now
This isn’t about one doctor or one hospital. It’s systemic.
And for women, “we’ll get to you when we can” has gone on long enough.
Nugget of the Day:
Believing women isn’t empathy — it’s evidence-based care.
Listen in, and share this one. Someone needs to hear it.
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