How Doctors Take Women's Pain Less Seriously By Joe Fassler

720 Words2 Pages

The thought that physicians believe that women have a low pain tolerance is not supported by facts. In the essay “How Doctors Take Women’s Pain Less Seriously,” by Joe Fassler he has a great example of how physicians do believe that many women are not experiencing as much pain as they perceive they are. Men and women are very different and every one had a different pain tolerance and physician should treat every patient as an individual and not make assumptions right away. Mary Jo DiLonardo states in her essay that women wait longer than men to receive pain medications. In the medical field men and women are treated different when it comes to pain. Women were thirteen to twenty five percent less likely to receive pain medication. DiLonardo states that men received more pain medication and women received …show more content…

There are biological differences when it comes to men and women, reproductive organs, hormones, and menstrual cycle. Men and women have different coping processes, women tend to be more emotion focused, they seek social support, have relaxing techniques, and they tend to distract themselves. Men on the other hand go through denial; they consume alcohol, and or turn to smoking and or drug abuse. In Hoffmann’s essay she found that boys by the time they are in elementary school they lose a large amount of their emotions. Boys are more unlikely to complain to teachers or parents of the pain that they are experiencing. Girls are more likely to keep their emotions and are more likely to be sensitive when they are younger. I do believe what Hoffmann has to say in her essay. Looking at the younger children in my family I can see a difference between the boys and the girls. The girls are always the first ones to come up and complain about toys being stolen from them or getting hurt. Many of the boys will fall down and jump right up and continue

Open Document