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Re: Feminist perspective

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Hi Tinman,

I'm not sure if we can consider it discrimination as much as dismissal. I

think many endos, especially those of the old school, see our complaints as

petty and us as not really sick. I've had endos who told me Graves' patients

didn't need to see endos. I've been told that all GD patients are big

complainers and after they have RAI they blame every little thing on

it.....duh, having had RAI, I can see why. But they don't. Mention depression

or weight gain after being iatrogenically rendered hypothyroid and they lift

their brows and blame us. Most every thyroid medical textbook I've read

mentions how frequently doctors encounter female patients who ask for extra

thyroid hormone to lose weight--it's a medical propogated stereotype. Even

Dr. Arem in Thyroid Solution mentions this. It's unfortunate that the number

of doctors who truly understand how the thyroid functions are so rare. Here,

I think word of mouth helps. Shomon's doctor list is a great starting

place.

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Hi Tinman,

I'm not sure if we can consider it discrimination as much as dismissal. I

think many endos, especially those of the old school, see our complaints as

petty and us as not really sick. I've had endos who told me Graves' patients

didn't need to see endos. I've been told that all GD patients are big

complainers and after they have RAI they blame every little thing on

it.....duh, having had RAI, I can see why. But they don't. Mention depression

or weight gain after being iatrogenically rendered hypothyroid and they lift

their brows and blame us. Most every thyroid medical textbook I've read

mentions how frequently doctors encounter female patients who ask for extra

thyroid hormone to lose weight--it's a medical propogated stereotype. Even

Dr. Arem in Thyroid Solution mentions this. It's unfortunate that the number

of doctors who truly understand how the thyroid functions are so rare. Here,

I think word of mouth helps. Shomon's doctor list is a great starting

place.

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As thyroid

> problems occur most often in woman, and most endo's are male, I

> suspect a certain amount of paternalism, nay chauvinism is involved

> here.

OF COURSE!! Even if the endo's a woman--we all internalize various myths

about gender and race, regardless of where we fall in those categories.

For anyone interested in these issues, an excellent historical perspective

is available in Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English's classic For Her Own

Good: 150 Years of Experts Advice to Women.

Feminist scholars have done an incredible amount of research on woman as

patient. If anyone's interested, I can sum up some of this and my own

perspective (my doctorate is in English and FEminist studies with my

specialty on how anorexics have been constructed as patients--I treat

psychiatric theories as narratives to unpack, just like one would a novel)

on how these issues continue to shape women as thyroid patients.

It will be interesting to see if this particular health problem turns into

an area of feminist study (like childbirth did, thus helping to begin

de-medicalize birth in the past decade) either now or in the more distant

future.

Anyway, gender is, in my opinion, certainly part of the picture here.

B

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As thyroid

> problems occur most often in woman, and most endo's are male, I

> suspect a certain amount of paternalism, nay chauvinism is involved

> here.

OF COURSE!! Even if the endo's a woman--we all internalize various myths

about gender and race, regardless of where we fall in those categories.

For anyone interested in these issues, an excellent historical perspective

is available in Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English's classic For Her Own

Good: 150 Years of Experts Advice to Women.

Feminist scholars have done an incredible amount of research on woman as

patient. If anyone's interested, I can sum up some of this and my own

perspective (my doctorate is in English and FEminist studies with my

specialty on how anorexics have been constructed as patients--I treat

psychiatric theories as narratives to unpack, just like one would a novel)

on how these issues continue to shape women as thyroid patients.

It will be interesting to see if this particular health problem turns into

an area of feminist study (like childbirth did, thus helping to begin

de-medicalize birth in the past decade) either now or in the more distant

future.

Anyway, gender is, in my opinion, certainly part of the picture here.

B

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count me in on that too....I would love to hear (read) your thoughts!

Randi

Jody Spitale wrote:

> ,

> I would be very interested in your summation.

> Jody

> _________________________________________________________________

> Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com

>

>

> -------------------------------------

> The Graves' list is intended for informational purposes only and is not

intended to replace expert medical care.

> Please consult your doctor before changing or trying new treatments.

> ----------------------------------------

>

>

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count me in on that too....I would love to hear (read) your thoughts!

Randi

Jody Spitale wrote:

> ,

> I would be very interested in your summation.

> Jody

> _________________________________________________________________

> Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com

>

>

> -------------------------------------

> The Graves' list is intended for informational purposes only and is not

intended to replace expert medical care.

> Please consult your doctor before changing or trying new treatments.

> ----------------------------------------

>

>

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Elaine,

A comment about something you said here...

>>>Mention depression or weight gain after being iatrogenically rendered

>>>hypothyroid and they lift their brows and blame us. Most every thyroid

>>>medical textbook I've read mentions how frequently doctors encounter

>>>female patients who ask for extra thyroid hormone to lose weight--it's a

>>>medical propogated stereotype.<<<<

The one male endo I have seen told me when I complained about the hair loss

and the weight gain that those were " vanity issues " and something I should

not be complaining about...so he put me on prozac to *lose* weight! I

didn't stay on it longer than 6 weeks, I couldn't stand how it made me feel.

Another thing, my little sister was seeing a dr. who perscribed thyroid

hormone for her as diet pills without EVER having even a TSH done on

her...she was on them, in increasing dosages for over 10 years. She is now

in another state, the dr. that perscribed them is no longer practicing and

the new dr. ran tests on her and refuses to perscribe them, since she shows

no signs of thyroid disease. So it does happen :(

Jody

_________________________________________________________________

Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com

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