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  1. Oct 13, 2020 · But what was female hysteria supposed to be, what were its symptoms, how did doctors “treat” it, and when did they cease to diagnose it as a medical condition?

  2. Female hysteria was once a common medical diagnosis for women. It was described as exhibiting a wide array of symptoms , including anxiety , shortness of breath , fainting , nervousness, sexual desire , insomnia , fluid retention , heaviness in the abdomen, irritability , loss of appetite for food or sex , even sexually forward behavior , and a ...

  3. Jul 7, 2024 · "Hysteria" in Victorian times described a cluster of signs and symptoms such as hallucinations, nervousness, and partial paralysis thought to affect only women. These are now known to be common in psychological conditions such as dissociative and somatic disorders in both males and females.

  4. Mar 15, 2023 · The term hysteria, which roughly translates from Latin to “wandering uterus,” has been applied to women for thousands of years. Though hysteria has gone in and out of fashion as a way to...

  5. Oct 19, 2012 · Hysteria is undoubtedly the first mental disorder attributable to women, accurately described in the second millennium BC, and until Freud considered an exclusively female disease. Over 4000 years of history, this disease was considered from two perspectives: scientific and demonological.

  6. Sep 30, 2021 · Diagnosing a woman as hysterical impairs her ability to effectively engage with her target audience – the gendered historicization of hysteria has served to silence and repress strong women and continues to do so today, and we need to change that.

  7. Mar 7, 2017 · The term hysteria actually comes from the Greek word for uterus, hysterika, which Hippocrates first used describe illness that laid within the movement of the uterus. According to Hippocrates and...

  8. May 9, 2018 · For thousands of years, women’s health complaints were often diagnosed as “female hysteria” – a catch-all term that basically implied “it’s all in her head.” The condition was believed to be caused by a wandering uterus and/or sexual frustration. Doctors treated the condition using various regimens.

  9. Jul 31, 2019 · Hysteria was basically the medical explanation for ‘everything that men found mysterious or unmanageable in women’, a conclusion only supported by men’s (historic and continuing) dominance over medicine, and hysteria’s continued use as a synonym for “over-emotional” or “deranged.”

  10. Sep 20, 2017 · Hysteria was a womans disease, a catchall malady for women who exhibited any of a multitude of symptoms, including paralysis, convulsions, and suffocation.