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Medical Degrees Appeal To Additional Women
Recently there has been a shift in the field of medicine that will alter the shape and face of health care for years to come. In the United States, women are embarking on careers in the medical field in remarkable numbers. In recent years, the number of female applicants that were admitted to medical school were roughly equal to the number of male applicants. As of late, however, more women are applying to medical schools than ever before. Visit this site for further information on doctor jobs.
The first reason is that feminism has altered the perception that people have, females in particular, of jobs that should be done by females. In fact, other career paths such as law and engineering are also seeing more women entering the arena than ever before. These changes have increased the pressure on top medical schools to accept more female applicants, giving men some competition. Antidiscrimination laws have changed the way things are done everywhere, even if they have been slow about doing things properly.
Once women are admitted into the programs, we're not sure how they fare. At present, there is no research or tracking efforts in place to record female medical students who drop out. In the past data showed that there were more women dropping out of medical school than men. However, their reasons for dropping out had nothing to do with academics. Women who are currently in the medical field assume the dropout rate is probably equal these days among men and women because their numbers have went from being a minority to being a much larger minority than they were. Because their numbers are going up, some of the previous practices in medicine are coming to an end because of outright discrimination.
As an example, a medical school lecturer decided to tell a joke to his dominantly male class on one occasion. He says "In this list of words, which doesn't belong - an agg, a rug, a woman, or sex" to which he answered, "sex, because you can't beat sex". While this is pretty tame compared to how some men behave in locker rooms, it's not comfortable for women in a college class. As the coursework progresses through the study of the human body, you can imagine the jokes growing worse. None of this is progressing the equality of women. These jokes could soon be gone for good as well as some of the other overly discriminatory practices commonly found in the medical school setting. To get a closer look on medical jobs visit this site.
Not only are females trying to fight the stereotypes these jokes perpetuate, females are also trying to fight other important concerns. This is best illustrated by a situation that happened recently at a well-known university. A female med student was told she could not watch as a physical was performed on a male patient because she would have to view his genitals. In the meantime in another classroom, the same woman's husband was able to perform a pelvic exam on a female patient. There was also the issue of the admissions interview where a woman was always asked about her career outlook, as well as her outlook on marriage and having a family, while these questions were never asked of men. Perhaps this double-standard became a normal practice due to the overall lack of female participants appointed to the medical school faculty and admissions committees, where male professionals are still in-charge and passing on the chauvinistic ideals that educating women is a waste of time because they might decide to have a baby or cannot be counted on in surgery.
When the interview question about marriage and career is asked, many women find themselves being denied admission if they do not give the right answer. This is another issue that many women find highly objectionable. The answer the women gives is irrelevant because some male interviewers will bar the woman's admission regardless. If she tells the interviewer she doesn't want to be a mother or will have someone help her care for them, the interviewer will tell her she should be at home with them. If she says she's going to have children and stay home, the interviewer claims she lacks commitment to the medical field.
In more and more interview sessions, it became obvious that the perception is that female physicians are not as objective as male physicians. Many people feel that this is just another stereotype. There was a female student who says she knew overly sensitive male students and equally insensitive female students, so the way they behaved could not have had anything to do with their biological workings.
One dean at a prominent medical school commented that women actually bring much to table in the field and that traits that are seen more in women are in fact positive and make them good doctors. Women are definitely socialized to be more open and perceptive regarding emotions. He mentioned that in the medical field, this is an advantage in terms of patient care. Aggressiveness that is possessed by men isn't exactly a bad thing, but it isn't necessarily a good thing either.
Why are women allowed to be sexist?
Don't know if this is worth 5 points but...
I am clearly just an embittered and twisted male, but it seems to me that these days women clearly feel that they have the absolute right to be sexist - so many answers on this site, for example, are anti-male sexist. On the other hand, if men dare to be sexist then their lives are over - they are drummed out of their jobs, sued to the hilt, ostracised, etc.
OK, so I am exaggerating, but you know what I mean. These days, for example, MEN are represented as stupid, venal, banal, sex objects in adverts, WOMEN as sophisticated, successful, etc.
At any rate, this should provoke some response...
You've spotted something and I am inclined to agree with you (and I'm a woman).
It's a curious double standard. I believe it is part of the backlash towards what was perceived as patriarchal sexism towards women for thousands of years.
Whatever, it is wrong.
Men and women are, in my opinion, equal, but have different strengths in different areas. We should be working towards honouring and respecting those differences, not mocking each other.
Steven Soderbergh’s Next-To-Last Film Will Be Thriller ‘Bitter Pill’ (slashfilm)
When Steven Soderbergh decided that he wouldn't do [1] The Man From U.N.C.L.E.
in the wake of casting dithering and Warner Bros. wanting to make the film for
less money than he was willing to spend, we assumed the director would fill
that slot with another film. After all, Soderbergh plans to make only a couple
more movies before going into some form of retirement. We know the last movie
will be the Liberace biopic Behind the Candelabra, starring Michael Douglas
and Matt Damon. And now we know that the other film -- the new picture that
Soderbergh will make instead of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. -- is a thriller by
U.N.C.L.E. screenwriter Scott Z. Burns, called Bitter Pill. THR [2] says the
film is being pitched to studios now. We don't have a lot of info on the
movie, but it almost sounds like an offshoot of the last two collaborations
between Soderbergh and Burns, The Informant! and Contagion. (With the latter
already being born out of work on the former.) The trade says the only
available story info is that the movie is "a thriller set in the world of
psychopharmacology." The ...
Wet Twist Regiment On Male
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