Grace explores nine practical, expert-backed tips to help women and gender-diverse people advocate for themselves in a medical system that often doesn’t listen. From “fire your doctor” to “understand your patient rights” — these tried-and-tested practical strategies could make all the difference.
Plus: Grace hears how Erin, who lives with Hashimoto’s disease, kept advocating for herself in a medical system that didn’t seem to be listening — even after her pregnancy ended in tragedy.
CONTENT WARNING: This episode contains descriptions of stillbirth, birth trauma, and medical trauma.
Guests:
- Dr Pav Nanayakkara, a gynaecologist working at Jean Hailes for Women's Health and operating at Epworth Freemasons in Melbourne
- Dr Jane Hutchens, a researcher at the Insight Research Institute at the University of Technology Sydney
- Erin, who has Hashimoto’s disease and tragically lost her unborn son following abnormalities in her pregnancy bloodwork that, she says, weren’t thoroughly investigated
- Dr Alex Dunn, who saw four GPs before being diagnosed with a cancerous kidney tumour
Resources for this episode:
“Women wait for endometriosis diagnosis with multiple symptoms,” Dr Dereje Gete et al, 2023.
“Large-scale characterization of gender differences in diagnosis prevalence and time to diagnosis,” Tony Yue Sun, 2023.
Australian Charter of Healthcare Rights, 2008 (updated in 2019).
“Is self-advocacy universally achievable for patients? The experiences of Australian women with cardiac disease in pregnancy and postpartum,” Dr Jane Hutchens et al, 2023.