Sex and Medicine: Gender, Power and Authority in the Medical Profession Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Sex and Medicine: Gender, Power and Authority in the Medical Profession Book

After interviewing many Australian and English women doctors, Rosemary Pringle concludes that the steady flow of women into previously all-male fields like surgery and anesthesiology has changed the medical landscape. And it's certainly true that a confluence of many social movements--including feminism and consumer advocacy--has encouraged doctors to practice a style of health care less patriarchal and more "feminine" in its allowance for collaboration and emotion. In Sex and Medicine, Pringle doesn't paint a monolithic picture of a shift in doctors' attitudes, though. The tales of outright discrimination shared by some of the women are harrowing. On the other hand, women physicians have their own objections to demands made by feminists determined to redress power imbalances written into doctor-patient scripts. Some obstetricians, for example, argue that pressuring women to endure the pain of natural childbirth is more misguided than empowering. "What we understand as 'natural' is very much a social construction," Pringle reminds us. "As Saul puts it, 'there is patently no precedent in nature or any other culture for a woman standing naked under a hot shower embracing her partner and sucking ice cubes.'" Although sometimes dry, Pringle's research offers solid insights into gender skirmishes in medical culture that affect health care in many Western countries. --Francesca ColtreraRead More

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  • Book Description

    This book asks the question 'Do women doctors make a difference?'. Based on an extensive survey of general practioners and specialists in Australia and the UK, the book evokes the culture of contemporary medicine by describing the experiences of doctors themselves. Pringle employs a disctinctive theoretical approach, but writes accessibly and with insight about a profession that is slowly being transformed--partly due to pressure from the increasing number of women doctors. This original and important work contains new visions for medical practice.

  • Product Description

    This book asks whether women doctors make a difference. Based on an extensive survey of general practioners and specialists in Australia and the UK, the book evokes the culture of contemporary medicine by describing the experiences of doctors themselves. Pringle employs a distinctive theoretical approach, but writes accessibly and with insight about a profession that is slowly being transformed--partly due to pressure from the increasing number of women doctors. This original and important work contains new visions for medical practice.

  • 0521578124
  • 9780521578127
  • Rosemary Pringle
  • 13 June 1998
  • Cambridge University Press
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 250
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