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Women's Health
The 1990s have witnessed growing interest and activism devoted
to women's health issues. Although individual women have always
been concerned about problems and issues they face in trying
to maintain their health and obtain the care they need, it is
only recently that enough women have secured political and medical
leadership roles to be able to influence important health care
policy decisions. Traditional medical education has focused on
the "70 kilogram male" model and has excluded female
subjects from clinical trials, therefore it is not surprising
that the unique ways in which various conditions, diseases, and
medications affect women are only recently coming to be addressed
and understood. For example, because women as a group outlive
men, they are much more likely to suffer from the chronic and
degenerative conditions of old age. It is especially important
to study how these conditions, such as dementia, affect women.2
- Do the
primary care fields of general internal medicine or family practice
cover the comprehensive primary care needs of women, or should
women's health be designated as a separate specialty?
- Do obstetricians/gynecologists
fulfill the primary care needs of women? Should ob/gyn be designated
as a primary care field?
- How can
physicians-in-training work to improve medical education on women's
health and overall care for women in general?
In addition, there is much debate over who is most qualified
to provide primary care for women. Some even support the creation
of a specialty in women's health. While academia, physicians,
and politicians debate, however, women are trying to get the
care they need. Furthermore, because they lack insurance, many
more women than men cannot access the healthcare system.2,3 A 1993 survey showed that 36% of women
were uninsured during the last year as compared to 23% of men,
and that 13% of the women did not get the care they needed as
compared to 9% of the men.3 The effects
of managed care on women's health are yet to be seen; many women
hope it will increase access to the preventive services important
to keeping women healthy, such as mammograms, blood pressure
screening, and prenatal exams.
STUDENT ORGANIZERS GUIDE
This Project-in-a-Box is designed to be used as a tool to generate
interest in the major educational, policy, and research issues
surrounding primary care for women. Along with an update on the
current situation in women's health and a brief history of the
women's health movement, you will find ideas for activities to
plan at your school, as well as suggestions for how students
can learn more about the issue and work to improve medical education
on women's health. There is also a current article on the debate
over making women's health a specialty.
To find speakers, contact the departments of family medicine,
internal medicine, and obstetrics and gynecology in your school
or in other institutions or health-care facilities nearby. Also,
see the Resources section at the end of the Box for a listing
of many local and national organizations devoted to promoting
women's health issues and research. Many of these organizations
can suggest national speakers and might know of women's health
experts in your area.
Activity and Speaker Suggestions
- Ask interested students to read the Box and article and come
for an informal discussion or simply copy the materials and distribute
them to students in your school.
- Invite a practicing generalist physician with a special interest
in women's health who sees many female patients to come share
personal experiences and opinions.
- Invite an obstetrician/gynecologist, internist, and/or family
practitioner who has definite views about the issue of women's
health to discuss the topic: who is best prepared to serve the
primary care needs of women. Or sponsor a debate discussing "making
women's health a specialty."
- Invite a physician who works in a women's health center to
discuss the care provided in such a center and the rationale
behind providing healthcare to women in this type of setting.
- Ask a physician involved in planning your school's curriculum
in women's health (if there is one) to meet with students and
discuss the parameters and purpose of the program.
- Invite female patients from different backgrounds to discuss
challenges they have faced accessing the health care system and
finding good, comprehensive care.
- Invite education or government policymakers who are particularly
active and interested in women's health issues to address women's
health from a policy standpoint.
- Create a panel discussion; invite several of the physicians,
policymakers, and healthcare workers listed above.
Remember that for any kind of activity you plan, providing
food is a great way to boost attendance. If you don't want to
plan an elaborate dinner, try something as simple as pizza!
Key Questions on Women's
Health
- The following list contains some hotly debated and still
unresolved questions relating to women's health, primary care,
and medical education. Choose some of them to send to your speakers
ahead of time, or use them to generate discussion/debate during
your planned activity.
- What are the challenges you face as a physician in trying
to provide comprehensive care for women?
- What do you feel are the strengths and weaknesses of the
different primary care fields in terms of being qualified to
provide comprehensive care for female patients? Do you have strong
feelings about physicians in one field being more qualified to
provide this care?
- How does medical education need to change to ensure that
one or all of these types of practitioners can address the full
spectrum of women's primary care needs?
- Where should ob/gyn fit into the primary care picture?
- Are ob/gyn residencies changing to prepare these physicians
to provide better primary care? Do OB-Gyns want to be primary
care providers for women?
- How can internists and family practitioners be better trained
to incorporate reproductive services and reproductive screening
tests into their practices?
- What are the most important facets of education on women's
health that should be incorporated into the first- and second-year
medical school curricula? How can medical students work with
schools to make sure that they are incorporated?
- Will the increasing number of women medical students, many
of them interested in providing care for women, put increasing
pressure on medical schools to reform women's health curricula
and training opportunities?
- How will the growing number of women physicians change primary
care for women?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages to care provided
through women's health centers?
- How is managed care affecting health care for women?
Suggestions for Follow-up
You may want to plan time for a follow-up activity at the end
of the discussion and conduct an informal poll to find out what
students think about these issues. For example, find out: how
many students think ob/gyn should be considered primary care;
how many think women's health should be a specialty; and for
those who don't think it should; which type of primary care physician
should be responsible for providing comprehensive care to women.
In addition to the poll, using the suggestions from this module,
you can discuss how interested students can become more active
in promoting medical education and policy reform related to women's
health. See the section at the back of this Box on "What
Can Students Do To Get More Involved?"
An Overview of the Issues
In their Fifth Report, "Women and Medicine: Physician Education
in Women's Health and Women in the Physician Workforce,"
published in July 1995, the Council on Graduate Medical Education
(COGME) found that "Women have difficulty receiving comprehensive
and coordinated care as a result of deficiencies in physician
training and fragmented care...Physicians as primary care providers
should have a broad understanding of issues relating to women's
health."2 Yet there is much debate
over who is most qualified to provide primary care for women
- family practitioners, internists, or obstetrician/gynecologists.
Some think the best way to ensure comprehensive care for women
is to create a specialty in women's health. Others suggest that
all primary care physicians should be trained to accommodate
the health needs of women since they make up slightly more than
half of the total population. It is not likely that consensus
around these issues will be reached soon, yet it is clear that
medical education must be reformed to include specific training
in women's health issues. Medical students should help lead the
reform.
The simple fact is that women now occupy more than 50% of
the slots in some freshman medical school classes. These women
medical students should push for more time and attention to be
devoted to teaching about gender-specific differences of disease
progression and health maintenance.1 This
is important because female medical students seem to be more
likely to choose the primary care fields. According to an Association
of American Medical Colleges survey in 1994, 30% of female medical
school seniors planned to practice generalist medicine (general
internal medicine, general pediatrics, or family medicine) as
compared to 18% of the male seniors.5
There is already some evidence suggesting that the gender of
the doctor makes a difference in the level of care provided to
women, especially with regard to preventive care services such
as Pap tests and mammograms.4
Because the current system is not meeting womens' needs, health
professionals and the public are calling for changes in the health
care system and in medical education. Practicing physicians are
flocking to continuing education classes focusing on specific
women's health needs. More permanent changes, however, have to
come at the undergraduate and graduate medical education levels.
Some medical education and training programs are building comprehensive
programs in women's health, yet others still lag far behind without
any plans to implement a such curriculum.
Women's Health Movement
Milestones: How did we get to this point?
Within the last decade, women's health issues have worked their
way from the back page to the front in terms of the amount of
attention they generate. This recent women's health movement,
which is still gaining momentum, has its roots in a movement
which started in the 1960s. That earlier movement focused on
the "paternalistic attitude of medicine" and concerns
over health information not being readily available to women.
Responding to the movement's pressure, the Boston Women's Health
Collaborative produced Our Bodies, Ourselves in 1973, covering
the functioning of the woman's body and encouraging women to
take responsibility for their own healthcare.1
The 1973 decision to legalize abortion served as another catalyst
to the women's health movement, again emphasizing women's responsibilities
and choices about their health.
In 1977 women's health took a giant step when, with less than
20 female members in Congress, the Congressional Caucus for Women's
Issues was established. Women in powerful leadership positions
were ready to make women's health a priority. During that same
year, however, the Food and Drug Administration decided on a
policy that would not allow pharmaceutical companies to include
pregnant women, or women who were potential childbearers, to
take part in drug trials. This policy set the precedent for women
to be excluded from health research both physically and theoretically.1 Instead of studying men and remaining mindful
that women might be affected or react in different ways, the
woman's body was disregarded, as if either it did not exist or
had changed to resemble the man's.
Women researchers began to point out that although women were
dying of cancer and heart disease at the same rates as men, they
were not being studied. The Congressional Caucus for Women's
Issues urged the federal government to take action. In 1983,
the U.S. Public Health Service formed a task force to investigate
the status of women's health. The report from the Public Health
Service Task Force on Women's Health, released in a 1985, proved
that the current, inadequate system of healthcare for women was
caused by inattention given to women's health in the past in
both research and practice. Based on the findings of this report,
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced a policy encouraging
the inclusion of women in clinical research. However, it took
five years, an investigative study by the Government Accounting
Office, and more urging from the Congressional Caucus on Women's
Issues, until the NIH put their self-proposed policy into practice.2 The 1985 report also emphasized the importance
of preventive health services for women and defined women's health
issues as "diseases or conditions that are unique to or
more prevalent or serious in women, have distinct causes or manifest
themselves differently in women, or have different outcomes or
interventions."6
Finally, in 1990, the NIH established the Office of Research
on Women's Health (ORWH) to take responsibility for establishing
policy and promoting research on women's health. The ORWH is
also works to increase the number of women in biomedical career.2 At about the same time that the ORWH was
established, Dr. Bernadine Healy became the first woman director
of the NIH and launched the Women's Health Initiative, a fifteen-year,
$628 million study, that focuses on 163,000 postmenopausal women.
It studies the prevention and causes of heart disease, breast
and colon cancer, and osteoporosis.1 Some
of the early leaders of the women's health movement are working
on this study, a prevention document unprecedented in the U.S.
both in size and in scope. They hope that the results will shepherd
lasting changes into medical education. In 1993, Congress passed
the NIH Revitalization Act, a law mandating ORWH and requiring
NIH studies to include subpopulations, including women and minorities.
Other important advances include Dr. Joycelyn Elders, the "controversial
and outspoken" first woman surgeon general hired and fired
by President Clinton, who made her mark as a strong female leader
in healthcare policy.7
In 1992, COGME identified 42 essential training components
to prepare physicians to provide comprehensive care to women.1 In 1993, Congress asked the Department of
Health and Human Services to study women's health and how it
was addressed in undergraduate medical education. HHS studied
medical school curricula and recommended changes. Most medical
schools do not have comprehensive programs in women's health,
but many are changing as the women's health movement gains more
momentum.2
What is Women's Health?
The fact that women's health needs have been, and in most places
still are, categorized as "reproductive" and "all
other" illustrates the problem.2 "Reproductive"
needs are perceived as the only needs unique to women. "All
other" needs fit into the "regular" system of
medicine, which is based on the male body. With this division
of women's health, it is not surprising that a fragmented system
of care developed. Women's health must be seen as a holistic
concept that includes all biopsychosocial aspects of the woman's
being.
Beyond gynecologic and obstetric needs, many conditions and
diseases affect the woman differently the man. Although some
health issues are the same, men and women often face them at
different points in the life cycle and experience different physical
and psychological responses. This chart shows when these basic
health issues that affect women:
A Lifespan Approach to Women's
Health Issues 2
Birth to Adolescence
- Developmental issues: physical, sexual, psychosocial
- Injuries
- Suicide
- Chronic disease or disability
- Sexual abuse
Ages 15-44 Years
- Breast and reproductive tract cancers
- HIV infection
- Risk-taking and health behaviors
- Substance abuse
- Eating disorders
- Reproductive health
- Autoimmune disorders
- Mental disorders
- Injuries
- Interpersonal violence
Ages 45-64 Years
- Chronic disorders
- Menopause
- Life cycle transitions
- Cancer
Ages 65 Years and Older
- Chronic and degenerative conditions
- Social isolation
Although the "basic diseases of man are the diseases
of women," the gender-specific responses and issues related
to those general conditions are only recently starting to be
studied and understood.8 For example,
because estrogen seems to provide some type of protection in
the woman's body before menopause, the onset of heart disease
occurs ten years sooner in men than in women.2
Although there is often a tendency to look at it in a vacuum,
the woman's menstrual cycle affects, or is affected by, many
different health conditions and has a great influence on the
total health of a woman. The menstrual cycle affects how drugs
react in the woman's body, and certain conditions, such as asthma,
are known to intensify or ameliorate at specific times during
the menstrual cycle.8 Women live longer
than men overall, but during most of their lifespan they make
more visits to physicians and "experience more acute and
chronic conditions".2 See the attached
article, "Women's Health: Should It Be a Specialty?"
for a more in-depth discussion of the biological and physiological
differences between men and women.
Women's Health is devoted
to facilitating the preservation of wellness and the prevention
of illness in women and includes screening, diagnosis, and management
of conditions which are unique to women; are more common in women;
are more serious in women; and have manifestations, risk factors
or interventions which are different in women. It also recognizes
the importance of the study of gender differences; recognizes
multidisciplinary team approaches; includes the values and knowledge
of women and their experience in health and illness; recognizes
the diversity of women's health needs over the life cycle, and
how these needs reflect differences in race, class, ethnicity,
culture, sexual preference and levels of education and access
to care; and includes the empowerment of women, as for all patients,
to be informed participants in their own health care.
(Definition of Women's Health,
as accepted by the National Academy on Women's Health Medical
Education, September 26, 1994.)
Factors Affecting Women's
Health
Besides the traditional conceptual framework upon which our medical
system is based, there are many other factors, i.e. socioeconomic
status, demographic shifts, changing family structure and lack
of insurance, contributing to the problem of women not receiving
comprehensive healthcare.2 Women outnumber
men in the older segment of the population and are therefore
disproportionately affected by the diseases and conditions of
old age. In 1996, there were 13 million men enrolled in Medicare,
as compared to 19 million women (Washington Post. January 16,
1996:H6). By 2030, the U.S. Bureau of the Census predicts that
Caucasians will comprise only 60% of the U.S. population. Ethnic
minority women have a lower life expectancy than Caucasian women
and suffer disproportionately from some medical problems.2 COGME also found that, "Because of
their socioeconomic status and position in the workforce, women
are twice as likely as men to be underinsured for their health
care needs."2
Women's Health As a Specialty
Should women's health be a specialty? Proponents of the idea
believe it is the best way for women's health to gain the attention
it deserves in a system traditionally biased toward males. They
want a separate specialty to give women's health a strong foundation
to provide training on the specific health concerns of women
and advance the women's health research agenda. Opponents are
afraid that making women's health a specialty will lead to further
fragmentation of the system and perpetuate the philosophy of
women as "other". They want to improve care for women
by expanding and improving training in the other primary care
fields.2
The issue gets further complicated by the debate over which
primary care providers are most qualified to provide comprehensive
care to women. Some think family practice and internal medicine
physicians are best suited to provide that care, while others
believe that obstetrician/gynecologists are just as qualified.
This leads into the question whether ob/gyn should even be considered
primary care. Increased attention to the issue should lead to
better training of physicians and improved comprehensive care
for women; it will be an empirical change for the better, regardless
of one's position in the debate. See the article included with
this Box, "Women's Health: Should It Be A Specialty,"
for a more in depth look at the arguments.
Women's Health Centers
The term "women's health center" started to be used
when the women's health movement began in the 1960's and referred
to freestanding centers designed by women as alternatives to
mainstream healthcare.9 The first of the
women's health centers focused mainly on gynecological and reproductive
services. The 1993 National Survey of Women's Health Centers
estimated that there were 3600 women's health centers in operation
with service designations as follows: 71% were reproductive health
centers, 12% were primary care centers, 6% breast centers, 4%
birth centers, and 6% were "other" various types.9 At this time they found that 7% of U.S. women,
7.8 million women, used women's health centers as their "usual
source of care".9 In general, there
has not been much research assessing these centers and it remains
to be seen whether they can or will become significant sources
of comprehensive care for women. What is clear is that women
are the prominent leaders and administrators in these centers.9
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is currently
making an effort to support the "one-stop shopping"
type centers for comprehensive women's health care. In the fall
of 1996, they selected six academic institutions to serve as
National Centers of Excellence in Women's Health including, Allegheny
University of the Health Sciences in State University Medical
Center, University of California at San Francisco, University
of Pennsylvania and Yale University.10
As they strive to provide comprehensive care to women, the sites
will conduct projects on education in gender differences in the
causes, treatment and prevention of disease; develop a multidisciplinary
research agenda; and distribute educational materials to health
care providers and the public.10
Six more academic institutions are to be selected as National
Centers of Excellence in Women's Health and funding for the initiative
is expected to increase. For more information on this program,
contact the U.S. Public Health Service Office on Women's Health
at (202) 690-7650.
Prevention and Managed Care
Dr. Vivian Pinn, director, Office on Women's Health, National
Institutes of Health, outlines women's chief health concerns,
"Wellness and how to preserve wellness. Prevention from
the standpoint of personal responsibility, as 'Do I eat right?
Do I take care of my body? Do I deal with stress right?' Prevention
is the key."(New York Times.June 22, 1997)
Everyone seems to agree that preventive care and preventive
services are crucial to women's health. And the number of women
in all age, racial and ethnic groups receiving these services
is increasing, however, large numbers of women are still not
getting recommended preventive care.2
According to a study conducted for the Commonwealth Fund in 1993,
these percentages of women had not received the following basic
preventive care services in the past year:
- Breast exam 33%
- Pap smear 35%
- Pelvic exam 36%
- Complete physical 39%
- Mammogram (women over 50) 33%3
The reasons for women not receiving these services are varied,
including inadequate insurance coverage, lack of recommendations
from physicians and lack of uniform standards for preventive
services.2 It is clear that there is great
room for improvement in this area, and it is believed that improving
preventive care for women will significantly improve women's
health overall. Whether the shift to managed care will help to
improve preventive care is yet to be seen; the potential seems
to be there. Some believe that the structure of the managed care
system has the potential to amend some of the fragmentation of
services and lead better comprehensive, coordinated care that
includes preventive services. Research so far has brought mostly
inconclusive evidence and a great deal more research is needed
to determine how the shift to managed care will impact the health
of women.11
Developing Better Curricula
and Training in Women's Health
In 1993, the American Medical Women's Association (AMWA) and,
specifically, Dr. Lila Wallis, who is referred to as "grandmother
of the women's health movement", created the Advanced Curriculum
on Women's Health.1 The two-part, continuing
medical education course, which has been used to re-train many
physicians, focuses on conditions and diseases affecting women
at all life stages. It addresses both psychosocial and biological
effects. Contact AMWA (see the Resources section) for more information.
Women's Health in the Curriculum: A Resource Guide for Faculty
was recently published by the National Academy on Women's Health
Medical Education (NAWHME), a joint project of the American Medical
Women's Association and the Allegheny University of Health Sciences
in Philadelphia. This 193-page book details how women's health
can be incorporated into any level medical education curriculum.
For information contact Glenda Donoghue, MD, at (215) 762-4260
or email to donoghue@auhs.edu
There is a "current inadequacy
of women's health training in medical school education. Because
of a lag in research on women's health, and because almost all
medical schools use the 70-kilogram male as their model, medical
practitioners have gaps in their knowledge about the special
health needs of women. Physicians, therefore, are not adequately
trained to address the needs of half of our population, which
results in poorer quality of care for women and increased costs
as some of women's health care needs are misdiagnosed or mistreated."12
The ORWH published Women's Health in the Medical School Curriculum:
Report of a Survey and Recommendations which identifies content
areas that should form the core of a women's health curriculum.
It recommends that women's health needs start being addressed
the first year of medical school. The report also emphasizes
that medical students need to understand the patterns that women
follow in seeking health care and demonstrate sensitivity to
gender-specific differences in making clinical decisions.12
The ORWH report suggests some specific strategies for incorporating
women's health into medical school curricula. First, gender-specific
information should be incorporated into both the basic science
and clinical years of medical school. Second, clinical information
should be introduced into the basic science curricula in the
preclinical years using newer, problem-based teaching and learning
methods. Third, it is important to look at the health issues
facing women at different stages in their life span. Fourth,
special modules can be developed to address gender-specific issues,
such as domestic violence or child abuse. Finally, clinical clerkships
can be restructured to provide rotations that cover comprehensive
care for women.12 Some medical schools
have already developed women's health centers that provide comprehensive
care for female patients of all ages (see previous section on
Women's Health Centers).
How can students get more
involved?
- Contact your congressional representatives to show support
for bills that reform women's health and vote for candidates
that support these bills/issues.
- Contact AMSA's Advocacy Standing Committee on Women in Medicine
to find out how you can get involved at the local and/or national
level. Call (703) 620-6600, ext. 458, to leave a voicemail message
for the coordinators.
- Get involved in women's health programs already established
in the community or start a new program.
- Contact any of the organizations listed in the resources
section and ask them for suggestions. Just recently the Jacobs
Institute of Women's Health offered a $1000 manuscript prize
for the best submission on developing new models of primary women's
health care. It's a timely topic, and there are increasing funds
available for research and programs.
- Join the National Women's Health Network or the American
Medical Women's Association and get involved on a national level.
The Resources section at the end of the Box contains the contact
information.
- Use this Project-in-a-Box to plan a women's health-focused
activity at your school!
- Review your school's women's health curriculum (if there
is one) and make suggestions for changes or lobby to get a women's
health program instituted. See "Developing Better Curricula
and Training in Women's Health" for resources.
Developing a women's health curriculum in a medical school
requires joint efforts of the curriculum committees, representatives
from various disciplines, and the student body. To improve healthcare
for women, it is imperative that students study women's health
issues from day one in medical school, not in just a single OB/GYN
clerkship.12
"There is a concerted effort by professional societies,
women's health advocates, and others to influence licensing exam
committees and those responsible for the accreditation of health
professional schools and graduate medical education programs
to give more attention to gender issues in curricula and training.
. . these issues are especially relevant to the education of
the generalist physician and the movement away from specialty
medicine towards primary care."13
-Dr. Vivian W. Pinn, director of the Office
on Women's Health, National Institutes of Health
Resources
- American Academy of Family Physicians
- (800) 274-2237
-
- American College of Physicians
- (800) 523-1546
-
- Council on Graduate Medical Education
- (301) 443-6190
-
- American Medical Women's Association, Inc. (AMWA)
- 801 North Fairfax St, Ste 400, Alexandria, VA 22314
- (703) 838-0500
- http://www.amwa-doc.org/
-
- Journal of the American Medical Women's Association
- AMSA Advocacy Standing Committee on Women in Medicine
- (703) 620-6600, ext. 456
-
- The Commonwealth Fund Commission on Women's Health
- Columbia University
- 630 West 168th Street, P&S 2-463, New York, NY 10032
- (212) 305-8118
-
- Jacobs Institute of Women's Health
- 409 12th Street, SW, Washington, DC 20024-2188
- (202) 863-4990
- email: jacobsinst@aol.com
- http://members.aol.com/jacobsinst/welcome.html
-
- The Women's Research and Education Institute
- 1700 18th Street, NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20009
- (202) 328-7070
-
- World Foundation for Medical Studies in Female Health
- 405 Main Street, Port Washington, NY 11050
- (516) 944-3192/8655
-
- National Institutes of Health
- Office of Research on Women's Health
- Bldg 1, Rm 201, Bethesda, MD 20892
- (301) 402-1770
- *For more info. on women in biomedical careers, contact Joyce
Rudick at the above address
-
- National Women's Health Network
- 514 10th Street, NW, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20004
- Clearinghouse (202) 628-7814
- journal: Women's Health: Research on Gender, Behavior
and Policy
- Some publications produced include: Taking Hormones and
Women's Health: Choices, Risks, and Benefits, Women and the Crisis
of Sex Hormones, and Turning Things Around: A Women's Occupational
and Environmental Health Resource Guide, and packets on many
other issues.
-
- National Women's Health Resource Center
- 2425 L Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037
- (202) 293-604
-
- National Women's Resource Center for the Prevention and
Treatment of Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drug Abuse, and Mental
Illness
- 1515 King Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
- (800) 354-8824
-
- Society for Advancement of Women's Health Research
- 1920 L Street, NW, Suite 510, Washington, DC 20036
- (202) 223-8224
-
- National Organization of Women (NOW)
- Web site: http//www.now.org/
-
- Women Organizing for Change
- Web site: http://wlo.org
Additional Women's Health
Resources
- In Her Own Right by Beryl Lieff Benderly. Recently released
by the Institute of Medicine. A good guide to women's health
issues, this book uses a comfortable, conversational approach
to address the above issues plus many more. Call (800) 624-6242
to order it.
- The New Our Bodies, Ourselves was published in 1992 by the
Boston Women's Health Book Collaborative; New York, Simon and
Schuster, Inc.
- The New Physician (AMSA's magazine) published a special issue
in March 1995, "Women Add a New Dimension to Medicine,"
that focuses entirely on issues in women's health and women in
medicine. Call (703) 620-6600, ext. 217, to purchase a copy for
$5.
- The Women's Health Information Source Book, produced by the
National Association of County Health Officials (NACHO) in June
1994, is made up of a series of information and fact sheets on
such topics as adolescent health, addictive disorders, chronic
disease, and reproductive health, and focuses on interdisciplinary
issues related to women's health. Call NACHO at (202) 783-5550
to request a copy.
REFERENCES
- Tschida M. Beyond the 70-kilogram male. The
New Physician. March 1995:13-22.
- Fifth Report: Women and Medicine. Rockville,
M.D.: Council on Graduate Medical Education; July 1995. U.S.
Dept. of Health and Human Services publication HRSA-P-DM-95-1.
- The Commonwealth Fund. Survey of Women's
Health (survey conducted by Louis Harris& Associates, Inc.).
July 1993.
- Lurie N, Slater J, McGovern P, Ekstrum J,
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