Beth Berg still laughs when she remembers the hours after her surgery, when Dr. Suzin Cho walked into the waiting room with her arms outstretched like a human diagram of a uterus.
“And here’s your fallopian tubes,” Cho said, bending one arm backward to show Berg’s husband how a twisted tube had been flipped out of place.
Even though Berg, 56, felt as if she “got hit by a truck” after surgery, it was the first time she felt a doctor had truly seen her.
“My male doctor before took great care of me,” Berg said. “But I think going forward, our conversations would have been very different as I approached menopause.”
Now, both of her twenty-something daughters also go to Cho’s clinic, OBGYN Specialists.
Cho’s clinic and six other Twin Cities women’s health practices joined forces this summer under one name: Almara Women’s Health.
Their mission? To address issues in women’s health care.
For years, women have been more likely than men to have their medical concerns dismissed or misdiagnosed. Research shows women wait longer for pain relief in the emergency room and face longer delays in getting an accurate diagnosis.