The Women’s Movement has greatly benefitted women in the
workplace. What about in their encounters with medicine? This paper reviews the
history of physicians’ attitudes toward women and then considers three
contemporary areas of medicine in particular: health research relevant to
women, health policies, and women’s success at working their way into the
medical profession. The picture that emerges is somewhat less than rosy. The
androcentrism that has been so glaring in the history of medicine has not
entirely gone away. Women and their concerns are still considered less important
than men’s, and women are valued more for what they provide than for who they
are themselves.
These problems are mostly not the fault of specific
physicians or other individuals; they are, rather, systemic problems—the result
of social practices and institutions that work together quite impersonally to
favor the interests of men over women. Correcting them requires listening to
women’s voices better than medicine, or bioethics, has so far managed to do.
The Women’s Movement has greatly benefitted women in the
workplace. What about in their encounters with medicine? This paper reviews the
history of physicians’ attitudes toward women and then considers three
contemporary areas of medicine in particular: health research relevant to
women, health policies, and women’s success at working their way into the
medical profession. The picture that emerges is somewhat less than rosy. The
androcentrism that has been so glaring in the history of medicine has not
entirely gone away. Women and their concerns are still considered less important
than men’s, and women are valued more for what they provide than for who they
are themselves.
These problems are mostly not the fault of specific
physicians or other individuals; they are, rather, systemic problems—the result
of social practices and institutions that work together quite impersonally to
favor the interests of men over women. Correcting them requires listening to
women’s voices better than medicine, or bioethics, has so far managed to do.