Over at Inc., Suzanne Lucas has a good piece published August 27, 2018 on how unconscious bias can affect fat women’s access to health care. Too often, says Lucas, their testimony may be dismissed with dire consequences, because of their fatness or their femaleness or the intersection of both. She gives two cases and links to a relevant study. As Lucas rightly notes, the intersection of fat and female with other socioeconomic groups (black, latina, queer) might also be something to consider.
Everywhere I have seen this posted on social media, commenters have pitched in with their own tales of symptoms being blamed on fatness that were actually something else, tests not being run, complaints dismissed as mere stress or worry (common for women), etc.
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Lucas closes by suggesting that health care providers “flip it to test it”, asking themselves what they would be doing of the patient were a skinny white man. This is the provider insight version of the question that fat patients are advised by fat activists to ask their providers: “what would you recommend if I were skinny with these same symptoms?” to be followed by “let’s try that before we set out on a years-long mission to lose weight to address symptoms that I have now.”