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82: Medical Gaslighting Exposed – Why So Many Patients Are Still Being Ignored with Dr. Aaron Hartman

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Manage episode 516882903 series 3624421
Content provided by Aaron Hartman, MD, Aaron Hartman, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron Hartman, MD, Aaron Hartman, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Have you ever felt dismissed or unheard by your doctor—like your symptoms were “all in your head”?

In this thought-provoking minisode, Dr. Aaron Hartman introduces the concept of medical gaslighting—a term describing when patients’ symptoms are dismissed, minimized, or misattributed by healthcare providers. Drawing from real cases and historical context, Dr. Hartman explores how this phenomenon persists today, particularly among women who are often labeled “anxious” or “overreacting” rather than heard.

He explains why intuition matters, how technology like AI can empower patients to advocate for themselves, and why practitioners must return to the fundamentals of medicine: listening to the patient’s story. The episode is both a wake-up call and an invitation to reclaim agency in your healthcare journey.

🔑 Key Points Covered

  • The third leading cause of death in the U.S. stems from medical errors, misdiagnosis, and treatment complications.
  • Hospitalization risks: a 10% chance of life-threatening infection during a 7–10-day stay.
  • Definition of medical gaslighting—when patients’ concerns are dismissed because they don’t fit within conventional diagnostic frameworks.
  • Common examples: unexplained pain, fatigue, brain fog, or gut issues labeled as “stress,” “IBS,” or “functional disorders.”
  • The critical role of patient intuition—trusting your body when something feels off.
  • Historical parallels: handwashing resistance in the 1800s, gender bias in heart-attack diagnosis, and outdated medical norms.
  • How AI tools can help patients generate informed differential diagnoses and collaborate more effectively with their clinicians.
  • The importance of listening and detailed history-taking—still the cornerstone of accurate diagnosis.
  • A call for clinicians to adopt a more empathetic, patient-centered approach, especially toward women’s health concerns.
  • Encouragement for patients to become advocates and co-investigators in their own care journey.

Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman & Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine

Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/

YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

  continue reading

85 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 516882903 series 3624421
Content provided by Aaron Hartman, MD, Aaron Hartman, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Aaron Hartman, MD, Aaron Hartman, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Have you ever felt dismissed or unheard by your doctor—like your symptoms were “all in your head”?

In this thought-provoking minisode, Dr. Aaron Hartman introduces the concept of medical gaslighting—a term describing when patients’ symptoms are dismissed, minimized, or misattributed by healthcare providers. Drawing from real cases and historical context, Dr. Hartman explores how this phenomenon persists today, particularly among women who are often labeled “anxious” or “overreacting” rather than heard.

He explains why intuition matters, how technology like AI can empower patients to advocate for themselves, and why practitioners must return to the fundamentals of medicine: listening to the patient’s story. The episode is both a wake-up call and an invitation to reclaim agency in your healthcare journey.

🔑 Key Points Covered

  • The third leading cause of death in the U.S. stems from medical errors, misdiagnosis, and treatment complications.
  • Hospitalization risks: a 10% chance of life-threatening infection during a 7–10-day stay.
  • Definition of medical gaslighting—when patients’ concerns are dismissed because they don’t fit within conventional diagnostic frameworks.
  • Common examples: unexplained pain, fatigue, brain fog, or gut issues labeled as “stress,” “IBS,” or “functional disorders.”
  • The critical role of patient intuition—trusting your body when something feels off.
  • Historical parallels: handwashing resistance in the 1800s, gender bias in heart-attack diagnosis, and outdated medical norms.
  • How AI tools can help patients generate informed differential diagnoses and collaborate more effectively with their clinicians.
  • The importance of listening and detailed history-taking—still the cornerstone of accurate diagnosis.
  • A call for clinicians to adopt a more empathetic, patient-centered approach, especially toward women’s health concerns.
  • Encouragement for patients to become advocates and co-investigators in their own care journey.

Follow Dr. Aaron Hartman & Richmond Integrative & Functional Medicine

Website: https://richmondfunctionalmedicine.com/

YouTube: @AaronHartmanMD

  continue reading

85 episodes

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