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How gender bias in medicine delays diagnosis of heart disease and chronic illness

Women’s health is compromised by atypical symptoms that often go unnoticed or dismissed, causing delayed diagnosis of heart disease and other chronic conditions. Awareness can help. Address this gender health gap and save lives

September 29, 2025 / 11:30 IST
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Doctors warn that women’s “atypical” heart attack symptoms — fatigue, nausea, jaw pain — are too often dismissed, leading to deadly delays. (Image: Pexels)

Heart disease and chronic illnesses often wear different faces in women, subtle, vague, and easily overlooked. Yet, these atypical symptoms lead to delayed diagnosis and treatment, putting women’s lives at risk. In India and worldwide, this gender health gap means far too many women suffer unnecessarily or lose their lives prematurely. Experts say it’s time to listen more carefully and act swiftly.

Women don’t always experience classic symptoms, Dr R. R. Kasliwal, Chairman,  Clinical and Preventive Cardiology,  Medanta, Gurugram, told Moneycontrol. “Chest pain may be absent in women suffering heart attacks. Instead, they report fatigue, nausea or even jaw pain, signs that don’t fit the descriptions doctors learned.” This mismatch is compounded by decades of clinical research focused predominantly on men, leaving women’s symptom patterns under-represented and poorly understood.

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Also Read: World Heart Day 2025: Why women do not pay attention to their heart attacks?

Social attitudes and medical stereotypes further widen this gap. “Many women’s complaints are attributed to stress or hormonal changes, leading to dismissal or delay,” Dr Kasliwal adds. Moreover, women themselves often downplay symptoms or hesitate to seek help, which only worsens outcomes.