Women Are Revealing The Struggles Of Standing Up For Yourself At The Doctor, And It's Frustrating But So Important


Too many times I’ve heard stories from women who’ve gone to the doctor with symptoms they’re concerned about only to be told not to worry about it, to lose some weight, or that it’s probably in their head. Yes, this can happen to men too, so you should also advocate for yourselves!

But since this seems to happen pretty frequently to women, I decided to ask women in the BuzzFeed Community to tell me about a time they advocated for themselves at the doctor and were vindicated. So, here are 21 stories of women sticking up for themselves:

1.“My two worst doctor experiences were after having my sons. The first story was three months after my oldest was born, and I woke up for a week with horrible, stabbing chest pains. I researched online and found it could possibly be my gallbladder. So, I reached out to my PCP who at the time was a retired military doctor.”

A doctor in scrubs sits at a desk in an office, talking to a blonde woman in a blue top who is seated across from him

“I told him my concerns, and he tried to dismiss me, saying, ‘Nothing is wrong. You just had a baby.’ But, I persisted. He finally gave in and ordered an ultrasound. Turns out, I had gallstones and needed my gallbladder removed.”

Yacobchuk / Getty Images

“The second time was a few months before my 30th birthday. I just had my youngest and noticed my bathroom habits had completely changed and not in a good way. Colon cancer is huge on my mom’s side of the family, and I scheduled an appointment with a GI. The doctor argued with me, saying, ‘Nothing is wrong. You just had a baby, you’ll be fine.'”

A medical professional in scrubs holds an endoscope with a camera attached, preparing for a medical procedure

2.“I had a life-threatening UTI that went septic and spread to my kidneys. The urgent care I originally went to was so nice and advised me to go to the hospital, but once I got there, I was not taken seriously at all.”

A woman with curly hair attentively listens to someone out of focus in a candid indoor setting

3.“I developed debilitating pain in my neck and shoulder to the point where I couldn’t stand for any length of time. My GP sent me to a physical therapist, male, who told me I was a middle-aged woman with poor posture.”

A person's neck is shown with multiple red dots. A gloved hand is injecting one of the dots with a syringe

4.“I spent years being dismissed by my doctor, feeling like I was a hypochondriac (despite eventual diagnosis).”

“The change happened when I needed my daughter tested for the same condition I have, and against medical guidelines my doctor refused. I applied to change surgeries the same day, and my daughter was diagnosed because of my new doctor.

How come it’s so much easier to stand up for other people than ourselves?”

—noimpillagingeverybody

5.“I have a strong family history of breast cancer. Right when I turned 40 I got this painful lump in my breast. I went to my physician, who wrote it off as a cyst.”

A mammogram image showing dense breast tissue with a noticeable white mass in the center, indicative of an abnormal growth

6.I have been suffering from a gastrointestinal illness called SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth) over the past seven years. When I first got symptoms, I found myself unable to eat a lot of foods without getting a migraine. For the first five years of having this symptom, I was told by the doctors that it ‘is due to your stress and anxiety.'”

Kristen Bell makes a humorous face wearing a striped t-shirt with a light background

7.“My doctor basically destroyed the last 4 years of my life. To deal with the passing of my cousin, I was put on SSRIs that gave me Pseudo Parkinson’s. I told my doctor repeatedly that the drugs were messing with my nervous system. Against his wishes, I quit cold turkey.”

“My last straw was when he misdiagnosed my numb hands. He told me it was all in my head. In Ontario, you need referrals for specialists, so in tears and desperation after two years of numbness I begged for a referral to an ortho.

Within a week I was diagnosed with needing an ulnar nerve transposition. I had surgery 11 weeks ago and can somewhat feel my hands again. These doctors are generalists, they have god complexes, and they know very little about women, who haven’t been properly studied. Research accordingly and advocate hard for yourself.”

—Anonymous

8.“My sister-in-law had a sore under her tongue. Despite being a smoker who had already had lung cancer, her doctor told her to gargle with salt water.”

A person with shoulder-length hair is shown from the neck down, wearing a button-up shirt and smoking a cigarette

9.“For seven years I was told that the lump in my neck was ‘in my head.’ Ultimately, I was diagnosed with an incurable and advanced cancer.”

—Anonymous

10.“I was in active labor with my son. I was also two weeks past my due date, and my son was still very active, flipping around and such. I had a very unusual labor/contraction pattern: 90 seconds long, 90 seconds apart, with little to no progression. This went on for two days before they decided to induce me the first time.”

A healthcare professional in scrubs is attending to a pregnant woman lying in a hospital bed, gently resting a hand on her arm

“I still kept telling them something was wrong, but was dismissed by every single person I spoke to. I was starting to feel the contractions again, so they came in to check on me and found that my son’s heartbeat was gone.”

Kristin Davis is in a close-up shot, looking ahead with a sad expression

“To make matters worse, I had previously discussed having my tubes tied after my pregnancy. I asked the doctor to do it after they delivered my son since they were already in there. The doctor turned and asked my husband (who was holding my son) if he was okay with that, and the son-of-a-bitch said ‘No.’ So, the doctor just sewed me up. I was never told I needed my husband’s permission in our previous discussions.”

Medical team in an operating room, with one person passing a surgical instrument to another

11.“I was a teenager and had a cough, a fever, a sore throat, muscle aches, a headache, difficulty breathing, and was vomiting. Instead of listening to my issues or even using the oxygen meter, my doctor accused me of being pregnant.”

A pregnancy test showing a negative result on a plain background

12.“After a nasty bout of Covid, I experienced sudden hearing loss and was ultimately diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder called Ménière’s Disease. Symptoms range from crippling vertigo to tinnitus and severe hearing loss in one or both ears due to a buildup of fluid in the inner ear.”

Partially unwrapped chocolate bar with floral designs, one bite taken. Pink background

13.“I wouldn’t say I advocated for myself, but for someone else. My father lives with my boyfriend and myself. He has had so many health issues. He had been hospitalized for about five days with a GI bleed — his third in three years. They took him off one of his medications, and it caused him a lot of stomach issues, meaning a super sick Dad, three days before Christmas.”

A Christmas tree decorated with ornaments and lights stands with wrapped presents underneath. The presents are in festive wrapping paper, adding to the holiday ambiance

“She told me she couldn’t prescribe anything, so I told her to get the doctor — ‘He’s on vacation.’ Eventually, she reached the doctor, who prescribed a very powerful medication.”

White oblong pills in an orange prescription bottle viewed from above with a white cap next to it

14.“When I was approaching 60, I was feeling very fatigued and had trouble remembering things and concentrating. My doctor said, ‘What do you expect? You are not as young as you used to be.'”

Medical scan of a human brain showing a large blue section, suggesting a possible abnormality or condition, against a background of various other colors

15.“When I was in my early thirties, I experienced daily headaches for about a year. I was pretty good at pushing through and I ignored them for a long time, until it got to the point where I’d wake up with a headache that wouldn’t go away until I went to bed at night, every single day.”

“I’ve always hated going to the doctor because I feel like they never let me speak and I always walk out of there feeling like it was a pointless visit, but I finally decided it was time to go; the headaches were unbearable.

The (female) doctor asked me if I ever experienced migraines. I hadn’t. I had one migraine years prior but never before and never since, so I knew this wasn’t a daily dose of migraines. I’d be in tears on the floor if I had migraines this often. We didn’t get past that point; she had made up her mind that it was migraines and prescribed migraine medication.

I refused to take it; I was adamant about not taking a pill for a condition I knew I didn’t have.”

“Cut to about six months later when I went to the optometrist to get my yearly eye test (I’d always worn contact lenses). He told me I had vision fatigue and needed multi-focal glasses, no more contacts.”

Glasses in an open case on a tiled surface, surrounded by a contact lens case, contact lens solution, and a bar of soap. No persons in the image

16.“Not for myself but for my kids. At 37, I feel pretty confident advocating for myself and walk into every doctor’s appointment knowing I will have to do so. What I never expected to be the fight of my life was helping my kids get the care they need.”

A doctor in a clinic talks to a man and a young child sitting on an examination table

17.“I woke up and couldn’t move the left side of my face and something felt very wrong. I called my fiancé, who then drove me to urgent care after not being able to get an appointment at my doctor’s office. I was told by the triage nurse it was going to be several hours before they could see me, and I was probably fine because I was only 32 and otherwise healthy.”

Medical brain scan showing a cross-section with varying tissue density

18.“My story feels like the opposite in a way, but here goes… I was in my mid-thirties, and I broke my foot (walking up the stairs outside Dodger Stadium!). I wore a cast, then a boot, for a few weeks. After a follow-up X-ray, the doc said my foot was not healing and that I should have surgery to get a bone graft and metal plate put in my foot.”

X-ray image revealing the detailed bones and structure of a human foot, shown from the side profile

19.“I am a doctor who has foot problems. I had a small fracture in my foot, and learned a lot about it from my excellent (female) podiatrist. I began to have similar pain again, and went to see an orthopedist for a second opinion about why this kept happening.”

“A resident working with the doctor came in first. The resident did not actually introduce himself as a resident or trainee, just as Dr. X’s ‘colleague.’

He told me that since my x-ray looked good, I didn’t have a fracture. I explained to him that non-comminuted hairline fractures of the metatarsals don’t necessarily show up on X-rays until weeks later when you might see a healing callus. He got his attending.”

—Anonymous

20.“This happened recently (like within the last six months). My boyfriend found a lump in my left breast. This is unusual for me, as I’ve never had lumpy breasts, ever — I’m 39, was 38 at this time — so I scheduled an appointment.”

Person touching their underarm while posing in a light shirt in a modern room with shelves and plants in the background

“My mammogram was scheduled for a month later. The radiologist was concerned and lo and behold, the lump looked like a tadpole (or dare I say a single sperm), and did in fact have a tail! The sonogram proceeded, and they ordered a biopsy for that same week. I had breast cancer. Stage 0, caught very very early.”

Woman in a medical gown undergoing a mammogram, assisted by a healthcare professional in a white coat

21.And finally: “Not me, but my eldest sister. She was 14 at the time, and I was just a baby. She noticed some unusual pain when she was bouncing me on her abdomen. My mom brushed her off at first, telling her that ovarian pain/cramping was normal, but my sister insisted on going to the doctor.”

Two people in a doctor's office. One person, wearing a striped shirt and ripped jeans, sits on an examination table, and the other, in a white coat, is speaking to them

I take it the moral of the story is NOT to avoid seeing your doctor; it’s to be clear and firm with your doctor, and make sure your needs are met. Stay safe and healthy, everyone! If you want to share your own story, feel free to share down below; you never know who you could be helping out! Or, if you prefer, you can check out this anonymous Google Form. Your story may end up in an upcoming BuzzFeed article!

Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.



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