The career ceiling no one talks about
For millions of women with chronic illness, the biggest obstacles at work never show up in a policy — they show up in private decisions made alone, in the dark.
I called in sick on my last day at my old job. Not because I was faking it. Because I had burned through every sick day I had, and I still didn't have words for what was happening to my body.
I was 25, running product at a tech company, quietly unraveling. Two ER visits that year. A string of specialists. More than one doctor suggested my symptoms were probably psychological. I was terrified — and I was alone with it.
Eventually, I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease. My immune system had been attacking my own tissue. Around 50 million Americans are living with some form of it, and women make up 80% of those diagnosed.
I've come to think of it as an autoimmune career ceiling. Unlike the glass ceiling, this one doesn't appear in a performance review. It shows up in small, private decisions.
Do you take the promotion with longer hours? Pursue the role that requires travel? Switch jobs and risk losing the insurance you literally cannot afford to lose? These aren't abstract questions. They're the kind that keep you up at 2am when your body is already doing the same.
The numbers
WellTheory partnered with Wakefield Research and the Autoimmune Association to survey 250 working women in the U.S. living with autoimmune disease. The results were stark.
Each of those is a decision made quietly, with no one around knowing a health condition shaped it. A steadier benefits package silently wins out over a higher salary. A promotion becomes unreachable when it means longer hours and symptoms that don't follow a schedule.
The invisibility problem
Autoimmune symptoms — fatigue, chronic pain, brain fog — don't announce themselves in a meeting. The survey found 61% of women say their symptoms interfere with their ability to function at work every day or most days. Yet 61% haven't told their employer about their diagnosis at all.
Of those who haven't disclosed, most worry about being seen as unreliable or being passed over. In competitive workplaces, that fear is entirely rational.
This has become a workplace problem, not just a personal one. And it's more common than most employers realize.
What actually helps
The fixes aren't complicated. Flexibility and remote work change the calculus for someone managing an unpredictable condition. So does a culture where disclosing a health challenge doesn't feel like a career risk. More than a third of women who needed an accommodation either didn't ask for one or didn't get one. That gap is closable.
For organizations willing to go further: investing in chronic care that treats root causes — rather than just managing symptoms — tends to reduce both absenteeism and claims costs. It's one of the rare places where doing right by employees and managing costs aren't in tension.
Name it first
I think about the woman who called in sick on her last day. That was me. She is everywhere — quietly adjusting her professional future to fit a body the people around her can't see struggling.
Caregiving. Workplace bias. Motherhood. These barriers get named, studied, and addressed. Chronic illness rarely enters the conversation, even though more people in the workforce are navigating it than most organizations realize.
We can't fix what we don't name. This is a start.
