this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2023
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Feminism
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My first thought is that maybe because women's chests have been sexualized, men are more hesitant to perform cpr on women in a public place. Not saying that either piece of that puzzle is right or rational, by the way. I'd be interested to see the numbers on the gender ratios of people giving cpr to women in public places to see if that lines up.
People also tend to be more hesitant to hurt women, especially elderly women. And CPR done properly HURTS. A LOT.
"Benevolent" sexism is still harmful to women.
I think also AFAB women's heart attacks often don't present the same as men's, and a lot of knowledge about what a heart attach looks/feels like is based around what a man's heart attack looks like.
Then there's the way women's expressions of pain are more likely to be discounted.
How does someone's gender affect how their heart attack looks like?
Sorry, I mean AFAB people (who are not Intersex. Unfortunately I'm not sure how biology affects the symptoms/ presentation of heart attacks for Intersex people).
I have edited.
Darn it why is the delete button so close to the edit buttn? This has happened to me 3x now. I need better fine motor skills.
This article provides a high-level overview of why there are sex differences in heart attack presentation, and it's primarily about heart attack being a very general term to represent acute severe heart dysfunction, and that sex effects many metabolic differences (for example, men tend to have higher hematocrit levels, which can lead to a specific kind of ischemic event) as well as cultural ones (the kinds of exercise that women and men do are often different; the kinds of foods that men and women eat are different).
Fundamentally the sex itself has very little to do with how the heart attack happens and presents, but sex does generally effect circulating hormones which in turn effect circulation and metabolic profiles. Sex often correlates with gender presentation/identity which comes along with it's own cultural values, which at a population level will effect things like cholesterol due to eating patterns or exercise. Finally, sexism itself is also at fault, in that many women's medical concerns are dismissed rather than addressed which can lead to a worsening of symptoms due to a delay in care.