The Part Nobody Puts on the Wellness Vision Board
Yesterday I drove to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription, and they gave me the wrong dosage. Not a big deal in the grand scheme, except that it meant another call, another explanation, another loop back into the system — on top of the two appointments I'd already canceled this week because they were scheduled for 11 a.m. on a Tuesday (as if I don't have a job).
This is the part nobody puts on the wellness vision board: the administrative tax of being a woman with a body that requires maintenance. The prior authorizations that expire without warning. The referrals that get lost between offices. The portal messages you send into the void and follow up on three weeks later, feeling vaguely like you're bothering someone. I've had a breast MRI rescheduled five times — not because I forgot, but because the system kept losing the thread.
And the mental load of it doesn't clock out. It just lives there, quietly humming in the background of everything else you're already carrying: the school pickup, the work deadline, the dinner that isn't going to make itself. Every dropped ball in the healthcare system becomes your ball to pick up. You are your own case manager, your own advocate, your own medical records department, and no one hired you for that job.
Research from the Urban Institute found that women face a disproportionately higher administrative burden in healthcare, and that nearly one in four people delay or skip care entirely because of it. Which is honestly not surprising. It's just confirmation that the exhaustion is real, and it's not personal failure.
It's a system that was never quite built with us in mind... and somehow still expects us to make it work anyway.