All Episodes
E115
January 13, 2026
From Hysteria to Medical Gaslighting and the Path Forward with Dr. Elizabeth Comen
Watch on your favorite platform
apple podcasts spotify Amazon Music youtube

Dr. Elizabeth Comen is a board-certified oncologist at NYU Langone Health, co-director of the Mignoni Women's Health Collaborative, and author of the groundbreaking book "All In Her Head: The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us About Women's Bodies and Why It Matters Today." In this powerful conversation about medical gaslighting and women's healthcare, she and Dr. Mary Claire Haver trace the deep roots of medical misogyny and reveal why the healthcare system still dismisses women's symptoms today.

Dr. Comen shares the story of a breast cancer patient on her deathbed who, hours from death, apologized for sweating during a hug. It's a moment that captures what nearly every woman experiences in a doctor's office, the reflexive apology for being in a normal human body. Whether it's apologizing for leg hair in stirrups or hiding underwear during an exam, women have internalized tremendous shame about their bodies. Dr. Comen explains this isn't random. It's the legacy of a medical system built by men who dismissed women's pain and symptoms as hysteria, neurosis, or anxiety.

Through meticulous research into medical history, Dr. Comen reveals how this medical gaslighting became embedded in healthcare. She discusses William Osler, one of cardiology's founding fathers, who described women's chest pain as "neurotic angina" and wrote that "these women do not die." Yet heart disease is the number one killer of women. She explains how women are twice as likely to call an ambulance for their husband's heart attack than for themselves, and when they do seek help for chest pain, they're far more likely to be misdiagnosed with a panic attack instead of receiving proper cardiac care.

Dr. Haver and Dr. Comen discuss the systemic healthcare gaps across medical specialties: why 80% of autoimmune diseases affect women yet it's not considered a women's health field, why female specific surgeries are reimbursed at significantly lower rates than comparable male procedures, why Alzheimer's disease is twice as common in women but received almost no research funding, and how the legacy of dismissing women's sexual health continues in breast cancer and oncology care today. They explore bizarre historical medical fears like "bicycle face," the myth that women would become ugly and infertile from exercise, and how plastic surgery evolved to make women "marriage material" rather than serve their actual health needs.

Despite the sobering history of medical misogyny, this conversation ends with hope. Dr. Comen shares why she's optimistic about the cultural shift happening in women's healthcare now, the importance of women advocating for themselves in medical settings, and how the next generation doesn't have to wait for menopause to stop apologizing and start demanding better healthcare.

Guest links:

Books:

Articles:

Other Resources:

Chapters

00:00:00 Why Women Apologize in the Exam Room (and What It Reveals)
00:00:41 Introducing Dr. Elizabeth Comen + “It’s All In Her Head”
00:03:42 Sponsor Break: Primally Pure (Simplifying Your Routine)
00:04:47 Comen’s Origin Story: From Dance to Medicine to Oncology
00:09:57 Why She Wrote the Book (and How It Got Published)
00:13:38 The “Ellen” Story: Shame, Dignity, and the Deathbed Apology
00:19:06 Insurance & Reimbursement: How the System Devalues Women’s Care
00:22:49 Beauty, Plastics, and “Medicalizing” Pressure to Be Pretty
00:26:45 Labiaplasty, Porn, and Anatomy Blind Spots in Medical Training
00:29:58 “Bicycle Face,” Strength, and the Myth of Women Getting “Bulky”
00:34:46 Heart Disease in Women: “Atypical” Symptoms + Misdiagnosis
00:38:28 Autoimmune Disease, Funding Gaps, and Why Research Lags
00:43:02 Breast Cancer Treatment & Menopause: The Quality-of-Life Crisis
00:47:45 The Vibrator Story: Sexual Health at Every Age
00:56:17 Medicine + Social Media: Pushback, Gatekeepers, and New Platforms
01:03:36 Her NYU Role: Building Whole-Person Women’s Health Care
01:07:46 Hope, Boundaries, and “Stop Apologizing” (Closing Takeaways)
01:11:21 Outro + Medical Disclaimer

About the guest

Dr. Elizabeth Comen

Dr. Elizabeth Comen, M.D., has dedicated her medical career to saving the lives of women. An award-winning, internationally sought-after clinician and physician-scientist, Dr. Comen is a Medical Oncologist specializing in breast cancer and an Associate Professor of Medicine and the Co-Director of the Mignone Women’s Health Collaborative at NYU Langone Health. She earned her BA in the History of Science from Harvard College and her MD from Harvard Medical  School, then completed her residency in Internal Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital and her fellowship in oncology at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. 

Recognized for her compassion and easy-to-comprehend communication with patients, Dr. Comen is the recipient of numerous grants and awards, the Department of Defense Breakthrough Award for Breast Cancer, the American Society of Clinical Oncology Young Investigator Award, and multiple grants from the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and the Susan G. Komen Foundation, among others. Her research has been published in prestigious scientific journals, including Nature, Cancer Cell, Journal of Clinical Oncology, and The Journal of National Cancer Institute. Chosen as a Castle Connolly Top Doctor in New York since 2017, she has also been featured as a New York Magazine Top Doctor multiple years in a row. A tireless advocate for women’s healthcare, she is the author of the national best seller: All In Her Head: The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us About Women’s Bodies and Why It Matters Today.