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Because doctors in the western medicine tradition don't always accept a patient's symptoms at face value. The person in the story got referred to psychiatry because medicine didn't believe him. Similarily, many legit medical disorders are discounted as not real symptoms by western medicine until decades later, for example, lyme disease, which is caused by a real organism with a real transmission pathway (ticks), with repeatable symptoms, but was discounted for years as "patients just making things up". |
I had a urinary tract infection that I felt progress up to my bladder and eventually into one kidney and then the next. I would’ve liked to visit a doctor immediately, but with American medical costs being what they are and hospitals advising me to hold out a few more days until a doctor in my insurance network was available, I’d hoped that small stinging pain down there would go away. But nope, it spread to all the regions mentioned plus I was passing blood almost nonstop. I couldn’t sleep, could barely walk, and felt like I was on the verge of dying.
I made it to a doctor once I knew it was a life or death situation, described my symptoms and the progression, and the guy starts digging into me, trying to say I’m just fishing for antibiotics (what?) and it’s clearly a kidney stone. I all but called him a dumbass, because it wouldn’t make sense for a kidney stone to move backwards up to both of my kidneys. I had to wait around for a urine test to prove that yes, it was in fact an obvious kidney infection, but the doctor was still skeptical asserting that it’s probably just a mild kidney stone, and reluctantly gave my antibiotics that cleared it up instantly.
That wasn’t the first time a doctor tried to argue against my obvious problem (I also had one argue that I didn’t break a clearly broken bone), but it was the most frustrating experience.