Her conditions included rheumatoid arthritis, Type 1 diabetes, borderline personality disorder and occipital neuralgia, which produces intensely painful headaches. Her lengthy medical file presented a challenge to doctors used to addressing patients in 15-minute visits, and she said she often found herself dismissed as "difficult" simply because she tried to advocate for herself.
"Too often patients have to wonder: 'Will they believe me?'"
she wrote on Twitter in May. "'Will they help me? Will they cause more trauma? Will they listen and understand?'"
She spoke often about her financial difficulties; despite her law degree, she said, she had to rely on food stamps. But she acknowledged that her race gave her the privilege to cut corners.
"In the months when I couldn't figure out how to make ends meet, I would disguise myself in my nice white-girl clothes and go to the salad bar and ask for a new plate as if I had already paid," she said in
a 2014 speech to a medical conference at Stanford University.
excert from the NYTimes article
She died from suicide at age 38. I wonder what method she used. She had an amazing life in spite of her health problems.