Friday, July 31, 2015

Further Thoughts on Women's Health

Sunshine in Lynch Park

     I started my June post remarking how surprising it felt that yet another month was over and that I was already in another rotation, and I could repeat those exact same thoughts now as July ends. Even though graduation next May still seems years away, the days have flown by ever since I started my clinical rotations. Since my last post I've completed my time in women's health, and I'm already done with two weeks in primary care. Leaving women's health was even more difficult than leaving my psych rotation, so before I move into full general medicine mode, I have some reflections from my time there. 
This has nothing to do with WH, I'm just
proud of my first batch of cold brew
that I made with my coffee sock.
     The first is that you learn to get over awkwardness in women's health. I'd say you get over it quickly, but that's not 100% true. There were still days toward the end of the rotation when it felt odd to ask a woman about her bathroom habits or if she had any discharge, not to mention all the times I said, "you're going to feel me touching you" or "do you have any irritation in the vagina?" Asking about a woman's sexual habits was pretty awkward at the beginning as well, especially if you started realizing those women were the same ages as some of your female relatives. That being said, my classmate and I needed to get over the awkwardness quickly. All these questions weren't asked just for kicks and giggles. They were necessary to get to the bottom of a diagnosis, determine if treatment was working, and figure out how a patient's issues were affecting their life. Plus, I quickly realized that the answers were not ones I could just guess or assume, especially when it came to sexual activity. A 50-year-old might look at me as if it was was crazy to imagine she might still be interested in sex, whereas a 79-year-old might answer "yes" so emphatically that it would seem crazy that I could think a woman might ever lose interest. There were a few women who asked why I needed to know, and at the beginning I might have wondered myself, but it was amazing how asking such simple questions could lead to important diagnostic information. I think of the women who'd given up sex because it had become painful or uncomfortable, but who had never mentioned it to a clinician because they were too embarrassed or because they thought nothing could be done, and then how elated they were when we could tell them that there was in fact a treatment for their interstitial cystitis, or vaginal atrophy, or pelvic organ prolapse, or whatever their particular problem was. It was pretty rewarding to be able to give someone back a part of their life. 
     The second reflection is a bit of a long one. It began with how we joked frequently during my rotation that being a woman sucks. Sometimes it was the playful joking of saying that women go through the awfulness of periods just so we can go through the agonizing pain of childbirth, or that once you hit menopause everything starts falling out (at least one kind of prolapse was found in 14-34% of women in the WHI study, and some studies think this is closer to 50%). At times though it was a rather dark sort of joking, especially when you looked at statistics. For example, 1 in 8 U.S. women will develop breast cancer in their lifetime. That sucks. Cancer of reproductive organs in general has the potential to be more deadly for women than for men because the reproductive organs of men are more easily examined, whereas the reproductive organs of females are primarily hidden inside the body. To often this means that symptoms of a cancer are not detected until the cancer has progressed and spread, a primary reason why ovarian cancer is the fifth leading cause of cancer death in women, even though only 1-3% of women will ever get ovarian cancer. Looking at younger females, 1 in 15 sexually active young women (ages 14-19) will have chlamydia at some point. This is can be quite tragic since chlamydia is most commonly asymptomatic in females (possibly as few as 5% have symptoms) so it's not treated, but left untreated chlamydia can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in at least 10-15% of women. PID in turn can have drastic effects on a women's fertility: 1 in 8 women with a history of PID will have a hard time becoming pregnant, and the rates of infertility increase dramatically with each incidence of PID. For any woman who does become pregnant, she then faces the possible heartbreak of a miscarriage. Depending on which study you look at, miscarriages happen in 31% to 70% of pregnancies, though most of these occur early in a pregnancy, often before the woman even knows she's pregnant. Still, 15-20% of confirmed pregnancies end in a miscarriage, a rate much higher than many people realize, which can lead many women who miscarry to believe that the miscarriage was their fault or that they must suffer alone because they think no one else knows their pain. 
     The hardest statistics to look at are the ones where a woman's suffering is not related to purely medical causes, but to what other people do to her. For example, there's the disturbing statistic that the rate of abuse of women INCREASES during pregnancy. In the UK it's estimated that 30% of domestic abuses begins when a woman becomes pregnant, and in the US almost 1 in 6 pregnant women have been abused by their partner. The fact is that I need to be more concerned about screening pregnant patients for abuse than for preeclampsia or gestational diabetes because the rate of abuse for pregnant women is higher than the rate of both those conditions combined. That's absurd. Even if a woman is not abused during pregnancy, chances are she has already been abused in her life because studies show that 1 in 4 women in the US were sexually abused as children. While I may not have statistics for it, there also seems to be an alarming number of women being sterilized against their will. I saw 3 such patients over the course of 4 weeks. Three! That's a lot in such a short time frame. These weren't old women either; all three had been sterilized by force or without their knowledge within the last 5-20 years, so this is a current problem. While all 3 were from countries other than the U.S., this is not solely a foreign problem. California didn't pass a ban on forced sterilization of prisoners until last September, and that only after an investigation had revealed over 140 females patients were coercively sterilized between 2006 and 2010, at least 39 of those without legal consent. This doesn't just suck; it's horrifying. 
Shout-out to the woman who first introduced me to the
beauty and strength of being a woman: my mom
     I could leave this post right here. I could end with the conclusion that women have horrible lives due to their own anatomy and the injustices of society. I could do that, but I won't, mostly because I disagree with that as a universal statement, and also because that's just not the conclusion I got from my rotation in women's health. Over and over again I was presented with the sheer strength of women. Sometimes it was the forceful strength of the woman in labor, pushing with all her might. Sometimes it was the quiet strength of the woman who'd suffered in silence, simply plugging away with her life despite lasting discomfort. Sometimes it was the plucky strength of the older woman who'd wink while reminding me and my classmate that "it's a terrible thing to grow old." Sometimes it was the resilient strength of the woman who'd faced injustice after injustice and hadn't let it break her. I've never really used the term "girl power" (at least not seriously), but there was something about working with women every day that grew in you the feeling of sisterhood and camaraderie. Yes, sometimes my patients convinced me that women were completely crazy (especially during my first week), but they also convinced me that I could work in women's health and really enjoy it, even the parts that aren't all pregnancy and babies (though there is something simply magical about locating a fetal heartbeat on your own for the first time... and every time after). Is women's health where I'll end up? I don't know yet, but I'm so very grateful that I was able to spend 5 weeks there.
     And now as I close, some last few bullet point thoughts*:

  1. KEGELS! No matter your age, women, you should be doing these. They might not be the most effective treatment once a problem like prolapse develops, but starting them early might help prevent some problems from developing in the first place.
  2. Uteruses are overrated. They're good for growing babies but after that they're more of a nuisance.
  3. If you are menopausal or postmenopausal, a local estrogen (either a ring or a cream) is something you might want to talk to your gynecologist about. 
  4. Coconut oil has a surprising number of uses. 
  5. If you're being abused, or you think someone you know might be, do not keep quiet. There are always ways out and always ways to help. Obviously this post was focused on women, but this point applies to anyone, male or female. Oh, and while we're at it, instead of just helping someone who is being abused, let's work on creating the kind of society where abuse is neither tolerated nor encouraged.
  6. Don't rule out a male gynecologist. My preceptor was a man and he was one of the best doctors I've ever seen. My classmate and I both talked about how we want to be clinicians like him one day, and you could tell his patients loved him. Sure, some women admitted being nervous about seeing a male gynecologist, but it was well worth it for such excellent care.
  7. On a similar note to the last point: Ladies, be nice to the male students. It's always going to be awkward to have a student in the room for these kind of examinations (and a few patients did turn away me and my female classmate), and it can seem even worse if the student is some young, attractive fellow, but if your clinician asks if you mind having a student in the room, please consider saying yes. The practical experience is invaluable and many of my male classmates have left their women's health rotations frustrated because no patients would let them see them. Just think about it.
Turtles know the proper way to enjoy sunshine.
     If you've made it all the way to the end of the post, congrats! It was a bit longer than my usual posts, and somewhat lacking in photos or catchy songs (I was unable to find a song that adequately conveyed the idea of "if you're a girl there's a good chance you'll face societal injustice, multiple forms of abuse, the pain of your own body working against you, and when you' go through menopause everything will go to pot and/or fall out, but it's ok because girls are awe-inspiring and amazing," so if anyone knows of one, let me know), but I had a lot to say after this rotation. Who knows what I'll have to say after my time in primary care. For now though, it's back to the books to review all the intricacies of diabetes, coronary artery disease, hypothyroidism, and basically everything else in medicine. Hopefully I'll emerge from my study cave to get at least a little vitamin D this weekend. :)

*I'm not a licensed or certified PA yet, so any medical advice is simply a suggestion. Talk to your own healthcare provider further if you have questions.

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