Reveals that medical anatomy textbooks contain few pictures of
women, according to a study reported in the 'Journal of the American
Medical Association'(Vol. 272, No. 16). The low percentages of women
depicted in illustrations in both non-reproductive anatomy and physical
diagnosis texts; Impact this may have on the education of medical
students and medical practice; Gender bias in the field of
medicine.
By
PT Staff, published on May 01, 1995
Women may represent more than half the population and make the
majority ofdoctor visits, but you'd never guess it by looking at a
medical anatomy text.
The paucity of pictures depicting women so enraged Kathleen
Mendelsohn, a student at the Medical College of Pennsylvania, that she
brought it to the attention of the dean of education. Together they
gathered the most popular medical texts and started counting. Flipping
page-by-page through 12 books, they found that women were depicted in
only 11 percent of non-reproductive anatomy illustrations and in 9
percent of nonreproductive physical diagnosis texts.
So what? Research shows students get lots of messages from the
images. "By seeing mostly male illustrations, they may perceive that men
are the norm, or the most important," says then-dean Linda Nieman, Ph.D.
And they may not be educated to handle all their patients. Students may
develop an incomplete knowledge of the female anatomy, the team reports
in the Journal of the American Medical Association (Vol. 272, No.
16).
A biased education may well beget a biased practice. "We need to
develop educational materials with an eye to our population so that
physicians can deal with all their patients--regardless of sex or race,"
asserts Nieman.
Women did manage to find parity in the illustrations contained in
reproductive chapters, however. But coauthor Sophia Lee doesn't see this
as a victory, just further evidence of gender bias in medicine and
society: "Women have traditionally been viewed as mere vehicles for
propagation of the human race."
The authors suggest that pictures of men and women be used
side-by-side to depict differences--when known, that is. "Even though
medical research has been done mostly on men," Mendelsohn points out,
"texts continue to present the information as if it applies to women,
too."
To Mendelsohn and her colleagues, each male illustration is worth a
thousand words bespeaking the lack of research into the as yet unknown
differences between the sexes.
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