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For centuries so called 'difficult women' have been labelled as 'hysterical' and 'out of their minds'. Today they wait longer for health diagnoses, often being told it's 'all in their heads'. Although healthcare systems are overburdened, why are women the first to feel the effects of this? Why is it so hard for women to find the kind of help they need? Why is no one listening to them? And why have so many lost faith in mental healthcare? Drawing on the lived experiences of women, alongside expert commentators, recent history, current events, and her own personal and professional experience, Dr Linda Gask explores women's mental healthcare today. In doing so she confronts her role as a psychiatrist, recalling experiences treating women and as a woman who has received mental healthcare, illustrating the dire need for more change, faster. Women can't all be out of their minds.
When women complain about our lives are told we are ‘out of our minds’. That can mean three things. Written off as merely ‘crazy’ anyway and wasting others’ time. Simply driven to that point by the ways in which we are treated. Or our reaction on discovering that our mental health problems are apparently less important. We are NOT crazy when we need talk about the kinds of pain, suffering, abuse, violence and fear that women experience. Women continue to be oppressed in a multitude of different ways and this causes suffering. However, women also develop mental illnesses too and to deny that is to gaslight the women who are suffering. Women need expert help from professionals who also understand what oppression is and the trauma it causes. Our mental health problems are deemed less important by society so receive less investment. Feminism should not only be challenging the oppression of women but fighting for better treatment for mental illness which is real and not all caused by ‘trauma’. We need much better evidence about women’s mental health and illness, which has been chronically underfunded. We need to speak out about the need for more compassionate, women-centred care.
In the past women who were deemed to be ‘difficult’ were called ‘hysterical’ and their ‘odd’ behaviour even exhibited in lecture theatres, for entertainment, to doctors in training. But today, even after decades of feminism, are women still being dismissed as ‘out of our minds’ when we complain? The focus of the last two decades has been on men’s mental health because of their higher suicide rate. However, women are suffering significantly too in many ways and still disproportionately, losing out in mental health care. Gender plays a key role in how we experience our mental health but is paid insufficient attention. What has gone wrong for women and girls? Why are we still ‘out of our minds’ and what can we do about it?
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