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Author Laurence, Leslie.

Title Outrageous practices : the alarming truth about how medicine mistreats women / Leslie Laurence and Beth Weinhouse.

Imprint New York : Fawcett Columbine, c1994.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  362.1082 L373 1994    ---  Available
Edition 1st ed.
Description xii, 434 p. ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 355-417) and index.
Contents A brief history of medicine: a legacy of ignorance -- Science and medicine: where are the women now? -- The research gap -- Women's hearts: the deadly difference -- Breast cancer: malignant neglect -- AIDS: women are not immune -- Surgery: the unkindest cut -- Reproductive health: fertile ground for bias -- From midlife to the mature years: the medicalization of aging -- "It's all in your head": misunderstanding women's complaints -- Women's mental health: a cruel double standard -- Drug marketing: selling women out -- Women and the law: unhealthy judgments -- Women and doctors: a troubled relationship -- The future of women's health.
Summary Backlash exposed the undeclared war against American women in the workplace. The Beauty Myth shattered and forever changed how women perceive themselves. Now, in Outrageous Practices, medical journalists Leslie Laurence and Beth Weinhouse shine a penetrating light on the medical establishment and discover pervasive neglect, rampant gender bias, and systematized discrimination in women's health care - an issue that promises to galvanize women in the nineties. Women's medical complaints are more than twice as likely as men's to be dismissed by doctors as psychosomatic; 90% of women with breast cancer are eligible for lumpectomies, yet more than half will undergo mastectomies; no definitive research exists about the long-term safety of birth control pills, yet doctors have prescribed them to millions of women for decades; treatments for heart disease, the number one killer of women in this country, have been tested mainly on men; women with kidney failure are 30% less likely to receive kidney transplants than men; and in thirty years of research on treatments for alcoholism, only 8,000 of the 110,000 subjects studied were women. Armed with these stark truths, Outrageous Practices investigates medical schools, where inflatable sex dolls are used to teach anatomy; explores research facilities, where "male doctors in their fifties are studying other male doctors in their fifties"; and takes to task physicians' offices, where female patients are treated differently from their male counterparts. As Laurence and Weinhouse eloquently demonstrate, sexist medicine is bad science - and the demand for nonsexist treatment is nothing less than the demand for equitable treatment in research, education, and patient care. Outrageous Practices is an extraordinary and revealing resource for women who care about their health and want to take charge of their lives and the lives of their daughters.
Subject Sex discrimination in medicine.
Prejudice -- United States.
Women's Health -- United States.
Women's Health Services -- United States.
Sex discrimination in medicine. (OCoLC)fst01114434
Added Author Weinhouse, Beth.
ISBN 0449907457
9780449907450

 
    
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