Women In Pain

Sign Now
petition image
Women In Pain to the Medical Establishment of the United States

Stop the bias which prevents the ethical and equal treatment of women with chronic pain diseasesnow.


Women in this country have for years suffered from a destructive bias and prejudice by the medical establishment when it comes to the assessment and treatment of their chronic pain conditions.

All too often, their pain reports are discounted as emotional, psychogenic or all in their head, and therefore, not real. Women for their complaints of chronic pain are often prescribed sedatives to calm their nerves while their male counterparts are prescribed painkillers.

Multiple studies support the fact that while women are more likely to seek treatment for their chronic pain, they are also more likely to be inadequately treated by health-care providers. This is in large part due to the health-care providers discount of a womans verbal pain report and the medical professions over emphasis placed on biological pain contributors rather than emotional or psychosocial pain contributors.

Typically, a woman expresses her pain experience in emotional terms, often describing how her chronic pain negatively impacts her family and social life. She may even cry which leads the health care provider, due to old cultural and social perceptions, to assess that the pain is psychologically-based without any physiological basis. This is often the plight of women afflicted with chronic pain conditions such as fibromyalgia, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, pelvic pain and TMJ.

Last fall, a report in the Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics titled The Girl Who Cried Pain: A Bias Against Women in the Treatment of Pain perfectly articulated and substantiated this endemic shortfall of pain treatment for women. It concluded, among other things, that womens pain reports are taken less seriously than mens, and women receive less aggressive treatment than men for their pain. Furthermore, an article in the New York Times (6/23/02) written by Nancy Wartik cited this report and exposed this ongoing medical scandal.

I, myself, have been an unfortunate victim of medical gender bias. My story began two decades ago when I was a 21-year-old ballerina with a very bright future. Then one day I suffered a minor ballet injury that quickly turned my storybook life into a living hell. For the first thirteen years of my illness (reflex sympathetic dystrophy), my doctors, predominately male, told me my physical problems were all in my head while the disease progressed throughout my entire body, eventually leaving me bedridden with chronic, intractable pain.

Despite my multiple symptoms (burning, stabbing, spreading pain, limb contractures, muscle tremors and atrophy, skin discoloration, etc.), my doctors condescendingly explained away my problems as psychological. I was told that I was suffering from stage-fright, enjoying the benefits of secondary gain, had tendonitis from Mars-- one doctor told me I was contracting my limb with my mind just the way one levitates oneself! My medical experience is an excellent example of what women afflicted with chronic pain are often subjected to in the male-dominated medical community.

This type of treatment smacks of gender discrimination and must stop now. Women should no longer accept or tolerate second-rate treatment and condescending mind-sets which put them at risk of life-long disability or worse. The emotional and psychological traumas these practices exact are immeasurable and ultimately destructive to the spirit and soul of the sufferer.

First, do no harm is an oath a doctor takes as a pledge to patient care; however, harm, more often than not, is the result when it comes to treatment for women with their chronic pain diseases.

I have taken the liberty of drawing up a Women In Pain Bill of Rights to articulate what I see as essential demands for a woman suffering from chronic pain and the expectations she should have of her health care provider:

Women In Pain Bill of Rights

A woman in pain has the right to:
1) Have her self-report of pain taken seriously, without prejudice, bias or dismissal.
2) Express her pain experience in its fullest context in a way that is true to her nature.
3) Have her pain experience equally assessed to that of a mans.
4) Not have her pain experience dismissed or discounted condescendingly as all in her head, hysterical, hormonal, psychogenic, too emotional, etc.
5) Have a free and open DIALOGUE with her physician about her pain experience and its impact on all aspects of her life.
6) Receive treatment that is consistent with current pain management standards.
7) Be treated by a physician enlightened to the fact that women and men experience pain differently.
8) Challenge her physician about diagnosis and prescribed treatments without fear of being labeled hostile or difficult.
9) Be treated in a clinical setting which understands and appreciates pain as a mind/body experience and accepts that emotional overlay (depression, anxiety, etc.), secondary to the organic cause, can adversely affect pain level.
10) Seek relief by whatever means is most effective, be it alternative, complimentary, traditional Western or by other treatment regiment.

Thousands upon thousands of women suffer needlessly on a daily basis due to the old attitudes and gender bias which permeate the medical establishment. These practices must end now before more harm comes to those who need help most.

Please sign this petition to support the spotlighting of this crucial healthcare issue and forward it to as many people as you can. All signatures and comments will be presented to media sources and politicians to help give this agenda the urgent attention it desperately needs.

Thank you for your time and much-needed signature of support,

Cynthia Toussaint
Vice President & Spokesperson, For Grace
A nonprofit organization dedicated to raising awareness of the chronic pain disease, Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy

For Grace
PO Box 1724
Studio City, CA 91614
818.760.7635
[email protected]
www.forgrace.org

Sign The Petition
OR

If you already have an account please sign in, otherwise register an account for free then sign the petition filling the fields below.
Email and password will be your account data, you will be able to sign other petitions after logging in.

Privacy in the search engines? You can use a nickname:

Attention, the email address you supply must be valid in order to validate the signature, otherwise it will be deleted.

I confirm registration and I agree to Usage and Limitations of Services
I confirm that I have read the Privacy Policy
I agree to the Personal Data Processing
Shoutbox
Sign The Petition
OR

If you already have an account please sign in

I confirm registration and I agree to Usage and Limitations of Services
I confirm that I have read the Privacy Policy
I agree to the Personal Data Processing
Goal
1,000 signatures
Goal: 5,000
Latest Signatures
18 January 2016
1000. Dora M | As a woman with Dercum's Disease and Ankylosing Spondylitis, I understand the discrimination that goes along with being a woman in pain. Thank you for your efforts on behalf of all women.
15 January 2016
999. Betty P | I suffer chronic pain from reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
13 January 2016
998. Becky P | I AGREE US WOMEN ARE TREATED UNFAIR WHEN IT COMES TO PAIN
12 January 2016
997. Kasey G | I support this petition
10 January 2016
996. Marilyn T | There is even more bias as women grow older and need understanding regarding pain treatement
9 January 2016
995. Nadine G | 3+ years chronic low back pain
9 January 2016
994. Lori D | I support this petition
7 January 2016
993. Mary S | I agree wholeheartedly with the premises of this petition. I demand equal treatment and consideration from medical professionals. I have often been told that my chronic pain and fatique are "all in my head" and not valid complaints, though with persistenc
3 January 2016
992. Joe Thep | Women don't get pains, women ARE pains ! In the ASS ! To men EVERYWHERE !
26 December 2015
991. Julie D | I support this petition
26 December 2015
990. Corina Yang | I was young when diagnosed, a big part of living life had vanished in an instant!
24 December 2015
989. Beryl P | I support this petition
14 December 2015
988. Owen Burns | I support this petition
13 December 2015
987. Amanda Ke | I support this petition
13 December 2015
986. Dawn E | I've had rsd for about a year, and im so glad i was able to find a doctor who knew what this was and is trying to help me. I went through 4 doctors in that year, and got lucky. My wish is that anyone with these awful diseases find the right docs, and peop
9 December 2015
985. Christine Donovan | I support this petition
9 December 2015
984. Jessyka H | I support this petition
7 December 2015
983. Rose M | I support this petition
6 December 2015
982. Laura W | Spot on!
6 December 2015
981. Roberta Ra | I support this petition
1 December 2015
980. Amy F | I support this petition
30 November 2015
979. Rose Mariearroyom | Since childhood I suffer from fibromyalgia, emotionally abondoned from family and friends and discrimination, by the medical community and Social Security Disability. In July, I will celebrate my 60th birthday, sixty years of combat with fibromyalgia with
25 November 2015
978. Michelle T | I support this petition
22 November 2015
977. Glenda H | I support this petition
17 November 2015
976. Lori C | I support this petition
browse all the signatures »
Information
In: -
Petition target:
The Medical Community of the United States
Tags
No tags
Embed Codes
direct link
link for html
link for forum without title
link for forum with title
728×90
468×60
336×280
125×125