Women and men die less when treated by female physicians study finds

Women saw a big difference
Some facts about the participants
Understanding health discrepancies
The female mortality rate
A big gap for female patients
The male mortality rate
There shouldn’t be any differences
Men and women practice medicine differently
Those treated by women in the study
What are the driving factors?
Men might underestimate females
Women may be more aware
Females are better communicators
A lot of variation
Understanding the small differences
Women are more comfortable with women
Leading to better health outcomes
The world needs more female doctors
Women saw a big difference

Patients across the board have lower mortality rates and hospital readmissions when they are treated by female physicians according to a new study. However, women appear to be the biggest winners when treated by other women. 

Some facts about the participants

In a study that examined eight hundred thousand male and female patients hospitalized between 2016 and 2019, researchers found that men and women have better outcomes when treated by females instead of male doctors. 

Understanding health discrepancies

Published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, all participants were aged 65 or older and covered by Medicare. However, those two facts didn’t explain the discrepancy in health outcomes for women when treated by different sexes. 

The female mortality rate

The study revealed that 8.15% of women who were treated by female physicians died within 30 days whereas 8.38% of women treated by male physicians died within 30 days. 

A big gap for female patients

The difference in percentages might seem small but NBC News noted the researchers said the difference amounted to a gap of about 5,000 women’s lives each year. There was a similar discovery with hospital readmission rates as well. 

The male mortality rate

Mortality rates among male patients between females and males had a slightly smaller gap but female physicians still came out ahead with a 10.15% mortality rate versus a 10.23% mortality rate for male physicians. 

There shouldn’t be any differences

In practice, patient outcomes should not differ regardless of whether or not a male or female is treating someone according to the new study’s senior author and associate professor-in-residence at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine. 

Men and women practice medicine differently

“What our findings indicate is that female and male physicians practice medicine differently, and these differences have a meaningful impact on patients' health outcomes,” Dr. Tsugawa explained in a press release on the new research. 

Those treated by women in the study

Of the roughly 458,000 women who were included in the study, about 146,000 were treated by female physicians while 97,500 of the 319,800 males included in the study were treated by female physicians.

What are the driving factors?

Researchers suggested that there may be several driving factors behind why female physicians tend to have better outcomes in death rates and hospital readmissions than their male counterparts, including one very worrying problem. 

Men might underestimate females

Male doctors may underestimate the severity of the issues that their female patients are suffering from according to the UCLA press release on the research, which pointed out that prior research has shown male doctors underestimate a wide variety of problems. 

Women may be more aware

“Our pain and our symptoms are often dismissed,” said Dr. Megan Ranney, dean of the Yale School of Public Health according to NBC News. “It may be that women physicians are more aware of that and are more empathetic.”

Females are better communicators

On the other hand, the researchers noted that female physicians may be a lot better at communicating with their female patients, which makes it far more likely that women will give female physicians more information that can lead to better diagnoses and treatments. 

A lot of variation

“There’s lots of variation between women and men physicians,” Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health explained to NBC News. Dr. Jha explained that women “tend to be better at communication, listening to patients, and speaking openly.”

Understanding the small differences

“Patients report that communication is better. You put these things together, and you can understand why there are small but important differences,” Jha continued. However, the researchers also noted one more crucial difference for female patients. 

Women are more comfortable with women

Women may just be more comfortable undergoing more sensitive examinations when they are being treated by a female physician rather than a male physician. This might lead to more detailed conversations with females rather than males. 

Leading to better health outcomes

Dr. Tsugawa said that more research is needed into on topic in order to understand the underlying mechanisms behind the varying health outcomes, and added the world would only benefit from having more female physicians in hospitals. 

The world needs more female doctors

“A better understanding of this topic could lead to the development of interventions that effectively improve patient care,” Tsugawa said. It is important to note that female physicians provide high-quality care, and therefore, having more female physicians benefits patients from a societal point-of-view.” 

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