We always associate chest pain with heart attacks, and for good reason, but it’s not the whole story especially for women. While chest pain is the most common symptom of a heart attack, women can have symptoms that aren’t related to chest pain at all. They need to be on the lookout for other, subtler symptoms.



    Key Takeaways:


  • In 1990, when she got her first job as a cardiologist, Goldberg suspected that a female patient had had a heart attack.

  • They were at the peak of their careers," she said. "They were visible. They were in the workplace."

  • The National Institutes of Health instituted a policy last year requiring that researchers specifically justify any research on only one sex.


"Experts like Goldberg have pointed out how sexism in the medical field has cost lives: Because research and treatments for heart disease were historically designed for men,"


http://www.cnn.com/2017/02/10/health/women-heart-attack-research/index.html