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Emergency room visits have shot up 37 percent among young women, in part because we're brushing off aches and pains until we're scary sick. Be safe—read our health guide now.

What you're about to read are the stories of three women who nearly died from illnesses they mistook for things like a common cold, a backache and a nasty sore throat. No, they didn't have swine flu. These women, just like thousands of others, risked their own lives because they ignored common symptoms until they became desperate emergencies. Experts told Glamour it's a worrisome trend: Even before swine flu hit, emergency room visits among women younger than 45 were on their way up, having increased by more than a third in the past decade, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta. Doctors say many of these ER visits could have been avoided had patients sought medical attention earlier. So, please, drop everything and get care if you're experiencing symptoms like the ones on these pages.

A cold that won't go away

Sara Abbott was a very busy 28-year-old museum fund-raiser in Washington, D.C., with a typical workaholic lifestyle. Most mornings she'd get to the office at 7:00 a.m., often not leaving until 8 or 9 at night; then she'd go to a bar or a café to meet her friends. “I was having a great time, but I wasn't taking great care of myself,” she says. “At one point all I had in my refrigerator was a jar of capers, a head of lettuce and a couple bottles of champagne.” She had a cough and congestion that kept getting worse, but no time to be sick, so she just popped some over-the-counter medicine to keep going. “I didn't want to take time off work or let anyone down,” Abbott says. She was sick for nearly two months before she thought of calling a doctor. When she couldn't get an appointment that fit her schedule, she just took more Dayquil and tried to ignore her illness. One morning, after a particularly late night, “I woke up and felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest,” she says. “I couldn't breathe.” When Abbott started coughing up blood, she was scared into action and asked a friend to drive her to the hospital. Getting a chest X-ray was the last thing she remembers until nine days later, when she woke up from a deep coma. She'd been hooked up to a ventilator that was breathing for her.

What likely began as a simple respiratory infection—something that in the majority of cases could've been cured weeks earlier by a round of antibiotics, says Jesse Pines, M.D., an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pennsylvania—morphed into pneumonia, and then life-threatening septic shock. Now 32, living in Boston with her husband and baby, Abbott says she can't believe she put her career before her health: “I still have moments when I think about what would have happened if I hadn't gotten help when I did.”

The smarter health move: What Abbott—or any woman with a bad cold like hers—should have done is slow down as soon as the symptoms started coming on, curbing late nights, drinking plenty of fluids and taking a day or two off work if possible. Anyone who doesn't start feeling better after three or four days should head straight to her doctor, says Dr. Pines. Getting a last-minute appointment with a primary care physician isn't always easy—in fact, Dr. Pines places some of the blame for increasing ER visits on doctors' tight schedules. But, in most cases, if you give the front-office staff a few details (“I've been sick for more than 10 days,” or “This is the worst sore throat I've ever had”) and insist on being seen, they'll fit you in. If not, consider an urgent-care facility or a walk-in clinic in a pharmacy like CVS or Walgreens.

Severe and sudden body aches or pain

At 26, Comilla Sasson, M.D., was finishing her medical residency in Atlanta when she started having excruciating back pain. She'd just finished her first triathlon and was training for another, so she chalked the achiness up to training too hard. Then, about a week later, she started feeling weak and short of breath—she wasn't able to dash up a flight of stairs anymore without stopping. “Believe it or not, I blew it off and just told myself I was out of shape,” says Dr. Sasson. A few weeks after her muscle pain had started, she showed up for a shift at the hospital sweating and hardly able to breathe, her pulse racing. Luckily, she worked in the ER “My colleagues literally forced me into the CT scanner,” says Dr. Sasson. The image it produced pinpointed the cause of her symptoms: two potentially deadly pulmonary emboli, or blood clots in her lungs. The pain and shortness of breath had been caused by the clots and the fluid collecting there. “I used to be disciplined to a fault. I'd work 30 hours straight and not sleep or eat and barely stop to pee,” she says. “But I don't do that anymore. Sometimes it takes almost dying to realize that life is very short.”

The smarter health move: “Shortness of breath should never be ignored,” Dr. Pines says, since it can point to anything from pneumonia to a heart attack. And neither should consistent or severe pain anywhere. If you walk around on a sprain, muscle tear or—worse—a hairline fracture or broken bone, you can cause lasting damage, says Dr. Pines. And if you're having sudden severe abdominal pain, it's important for young women to get medical help fast; it could be a ruptured ovarian cyst or potentially life-threatening ectopic pregnancy.

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Saturday, January 02, 2010 10:29:26 PM
RE: So Glad 2: I am so glad I have empowered you and other women like you across the country to take better care of yourself.  Keep up the good work!  Have a happy and HEALTHY New Year to you and all the women across the country who are making better health choices.
Sunday, November 29, 2009 12:07:44 AM

for the past few years i would say...about twice a year..randomly..i would all the sudden get really dizzy and then that would go away and then i would get a really bad headache then i would get hot and cold chills back n forth n then eventually vomit....this has been happening to me for a while...last time i went to the doctor he said that "oh you are just getting used to the seasons changing..it's normal..because the weather is bad"  or something along those lines...

 

i really want to know what is wrong with me, but i have no idea how to find out.. =/

Saturday, November 28, 2009 11:56:09 PM
About a year ago I was sick for a week and for 3 days I could barely speak, if I could speak at all. I'm on my parent's insurance so if I went to the doc, they'd know.
My mother has this thing about "wasting money" to see the doc when she thinks all I need to do is stay steaming hot in my bed for a day or two, but I feel very lucky that whatever I had didn't turn into something worse. Next time, though, I'll go see my doc whether my mother likes it or not.
Saturday, November 28, 2009 11:52:08 PM
Your doc is refusing to see you despite the recurring sore throat and it's been going on for 2 whole months? Either schedule an appointment with your doc or get someone else to see you, that's my advice. Better safe than sorry.
Saturday, November 28, 2009 10:07:19 PM
I have had a requiring sore throat off and on for the past two months;my Dr. refuses to see me in the office and repeadiatly calls in px. Its not getting better and I'm at my wits end with this cold.What should I do? It feels like the flu but I'm not so sure..
Saturday, November 28, 2009 9:34:20 PM
For years I had muscle spasms that the Dr thought was epilepsy, even with no siezure activity in the brain. Took meds that made me ill till I refused to take them anymore. Memory problems increased as well as pain through my entire body. Over the years the doctors kept telling me it was probably muscle strains. One doctor finally stopped one day and looked at me. "You look like your in a lot of pain" she was checking my son for a cold. I admitted I was in pain, she ran batteries of tests. Finally a diagnoses, Fibromyalgia. That caused the memory issues, the brain fogginess, the body pain and the muscle spasms. To have a doc take you seriously and to find ways to help you is a wonderful thing. Don't ignore the pain or illness. Keep going until your taken seriously. I was diagnosed 4 years ago. Still in my twenties, I am glad to know I still have hope for a cure. 
Saturday, November 28, 2009 7:18:46 PM
ive had  2 very bad colds and each time ive gone to see my regular doc he says wait it out. the first one in july turned out to be pneumonia, neede antibiotics.. i went to a walk in clinic... now im sick with another bad cold that keeps hanging on and again i was told to wait it out it will go away. its been 2 week and im still co jested ,,sor throat ,,raspy voice and just plain tired out. work full time and misse half a day of work.   going back to the walk in clinic,,,since my family doc says to wait it out.... swine flu has me terrified. and im in constant touch with hords of peopls as i work in a hugh retail wholesale warehouse. 
Saturday, November 28, 2009 4:56:20 PM

Health care reform is so important. It is not just about being able to go see a doctor but also affordable medications. I have diabetes and for one box of insulin it costs me $150.00. It is so hard to even find health insurance because of my condition and I am only 22 years old. I think there are too many people like myself who find themselves in the horrible postion of not being able to care for their health because of extremely expensive doctor visits and medications.

Saturday, November 28, 2009 2:05:23 PM
Health insurance reform will make it possible for everyone who needs treatment to see a doctor. More drs will be added into this growing career so that becomes possible. Also another change that will take place is that we'll have lower premiums and eventually have preventive care not just managing illness.
#10
Saturday, November 28, 2009 9:59:43 AM
Wow... I've had lots of those. I guess I'm just lucky nothing serious happened. I have a bit of a cold that hasn't gone away, though, so I guess I should go to the doctor.
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