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1.
Neurosurg Rev ; 47(1): 765, 2024 Oct 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39382721

ABSTRACT

Promoting the involvement of women in surgery, particularly in neurosurgery, is crucial in today's male-dominated landscape. Without proper recognition and encouragement, many talented and pioneering women may continue to be undervalued, despite their significant impact on the field. Gender inequality has been a persistent issue throughout history, with limited progress despite the increasing presence of women in the workforce. Historically, women were viewed as inferior to men, even within the medical profession, due to perceived physical differences. This perception was reinforced in religious texts, depicting women as bearing the consequences of the first woman's actions. However, it is important to recognize and support these talented women, allowing them to showcase their contributions in their respective fields. One notable figure in this regard is Maria Karampouga, the first female neurosurgeon graduate in Cyprus. Born in Alexandroupolis, Greece, Maria Karampouga began her medical training after passing a national examination and achieving excellence. After successfully completing her studies, attaining the top score in her graduating class she began a residency in general surgery and then neurosurgery in Greece. Seeking the best possible training, she left her studies incomplete and moved to Cyprus to restart her training in Neurosurgery. She was the first woman ever associated with Neurosurgery in Cyprus and in June 2023, she became the first woman to complete the country's residency program in Neurosurgery. Currently, she is a researcher at University of Pittsburg, Medical Center.


Subject(s)
Neurosurgeons , Neurosurgery , Physicians, Women , Cyprus , Humans , Neurosurgery/history , Neurosurgery/education , History, 20th Century , Female , Physicians, Women/history
2.
J Clin Neurosci ; 128: 110809, 2024 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39190963

ABSTRACT

It is crucial to promote the role of women in surgery, particularly in the field of neurosurgery, which is still predominantly male-dominated. Without recognition and support, these talented and pioneering women may continue to be overlooked, despite their significant contributions to the field. One such remarkable woman is Professor Zahra Taati Asil, the first female Iranian neurosurgeon. Born in 1954 in Iran, she graduated from medical school in Tehran in 1978 with a degree in General Medicine. After completing her studies at the Medical School of the Melli University in 1983, she became the first female Iranian neurosurgeon and was promoted to assistant professor. She held this position for 14 years and during this time, she operated on numerous war-wounded patients during the Iran-Iraq war. Her exceptional surgical skills earned her the nickname "The Golden Hands Surgeon" at Nirou-y-Entezami Hospital, where she had an impressively low rate of postoperative complications. Despite her professional competence, she was never promoted to associate professor, due to reasons beyond her surgical and academic skills. The dean of the university opposed Zahra's appointment as an associate professor and told her that if she were to be appointed as a professor, the Ministry of Health would separate men and women. He also warned her that the Islamists would only send women to her. She has retired but remains actively involved in both clinical and academic work.


Subject(s)
Neurosurgeons , Physicians, Women , Iran , History, 20th Century , Neurosurgeons/history , Humans , Physicians, Women/history , Female , Neurosurgery/history
3.
Am Surg ; 90(11): 3172-3180, 2024 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38849125

ABSTRACT

Historically, surgery has been considered an inherently "masculine" profession. This persistent stereotype has led to gender inequality in currently practicing surgeons, despite gender parity of newly admitted medical students in North America. Since women began practising medicine in the 19th century, these norms began to be challenged in tandem with the suffragette movement. In the United States, United Kingdom and Canada, pioneering female physicians and surgeons worked together to establish spaces where women would be welcomed and mentored the next generation of female surgeons. In this essay, I highlight prominent women physicians and surgeons that have contributed to the presence of women in the operating room through mentorship.


Subject(s)
Mentors , Operating Rooms , Physicians, Women , Humans , Female , Physicians, Women/history , General Surgery/education , United States , History, 20th Century , History, 19th Century , Sexism , Surgeons/psychology , Canada , United Kingdom
4.
Med Humanit ; 50(3): 520-528, 2024 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38821868

ABSTRACT

Second wave feminist legal and educational reform contributed to the fourfold rise in the number of women doctors in the United States between 1970 and 1990, challenging the hierarchical medical workplace from within. At the same moment, the feminist women's health movement (FWHM) identified and protested gendered health disparities, changing medical practice from without. This article analyses five women doctors' autobiographical reflections of medical training published between 1976 and 1987, during this period of gendered upheaval. In these works, authors shared their experiences of entering a male-dominated profession, addressing second wave feminist concerns about women's workplace equality. They explored whether women could become full and equal members of the medical professional, but also how women should become members of a profession that mistreated female patients in ways the FWHM sought to address. Through autobiographical writing, women doctors shared experiences that amplified these reform imperatives, while reflecting on their position as agents within an unequal healthcare system.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Physicians, Women , Women's Health , Humans , Feminism/history , Physicians, Women/history , Physicians, Women/psychology , Female , Women's Health/history , United States , Autobiographies as Topic , Workplace/psychology , History, 20th Century , Gender Equity
5.
World Neurosurg ; 188: 79-82, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38734174

ABSTRACT

It is crucial to promote the role of women in surgery, particularly in the field of neurosurgery, which is still predominantly male-dominated. Without recognition and support, these talented and pioneering women may continue to be overlooked, despite their significant contributions to the field. One such remarkable woman is Professor Aimée Redondo, the first female neurosurgeon professor in France. She was born in 1944 during the last years of World War II to immigrant parents from Spain. Thanks to grants and scholarships from the French government, Aimée Redondo was able to continue her education. She excelled in high school and even passed the entrance exam for medical school on her first attempt - a rare achievement at the time. In 1975, at the young age of 31, she became the first female professor of neurosurgery in France. After completing her residency, she worked as a senior neurosurgeon at the Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris and then joined the newly established department of neurosurgery at Beaujon Hospital. For over thirty years, she was a crucial member of this department and served as its head from 2004 until her retirement. Sadly, she passed away in 2022 at the age of 78.


Subject(s)
Neurosurgeons , Physicians, Women , France , History, 20th Century , Neurosurgeons/history , Female , Physicians, Women/history , Humans , History, 21st Century , Neurosurgery/history
6.
World Neurosurg ; 185: 310-313, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38395351

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Neurosurgery is a specialty that has been dominated by males. Although there has been an increase in the number of women in the field, it is not yet close to being equal. Some noteworthy women who have carved the path for other women to follow in their footsteps include Drs. Sofía Ionescu and Diana Beck, the first and second female neurosurgeons worldwide, respectively. However, there are limited publications on Dr. María Cristina García-Sancho, the first Latina neurosurgeon. METHODS: The purpose of this review was to illuminate the neurosurgical community on the life of Dr. García-Sancho. A thorough literature was performed on medical and non-medical publications that were either authored by Dr. García-Sancho or mentioned her directly. RESULTS: Dr. García-Sancho earned her medical degree at the School of Medicine of the National Autonomous University of Mexico under the guidance of Dr. Clemente Robles, who founded Mexico's first neurosurgical department. Her training took her worldwide. CONCLUSIONS: Her expertise allowed her to pioneer a revolutionary advancement known as the one-step bilateral cordotomy. Her perseverance led her to becoming the head of the Department of Neurosurgery at the National Cancer Institute of Mexico and co-found the Mexican Society of Neurological Surgery, where she served on the board of directors. This review aims to advocate for an equitable environment in the field of neurosurgery with Dr. García-Sancho's story.


Subject(s)
Neurosurgeons , Neurosurgery , Neurosurgery/history , Neurosurgeons/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , Mexico , Physicians, Women/history , Female
7.
Rev. chil. infectol ; Rev. chil. infectol;41(1): 168-173, feb. 2024. ilus
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-1559667

ABSTRACT

Revisando el segundo volumen de actas del Primer Congreso Latinoamericano de Medicina, reunido en Santiago los nueve primeros días del siglo XX, encontramos una conferencia de Eloísa Díaz, primera mujer chilena y latinoamericana en graduarse de médico, pese a la discriminación sufrida, que la obligó incluso a asistir a clases acompañada por su madre. Se analiza tanto esta conferencia sobre la organización del servicio médico escolar, como la introducción a su tesis de grado, y de paso las presentaciones de otros médicos participantes, haciendo hincapié en la patología infecciosa discutida y en su lenguaje verboso y florido.


Analyzing the second volume of proceedings of the First Latin American Congress of Medicine held in Santiago on the first nine days of the twentieth century, we found a lecture by Eloísa Díaz, the first Chilean and Latin American woman to graduate as a doctor, despite the discrimination she suffered, which even forced her to attend classes accompanied by her mother. This conference on the school medical service is analyzed, as well as the introduction to her degree thesis, and incidentally the presentations of other participating doctors, emphasizing the infectious pathology discussed and its verbose and flowery language.


Subject(s)
History, 20th Century , Physicians, Women/history , History of Medicine , Chile
10.
J Pediatr Surg ; 58(2): 350-353, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36384938

ABSTRACT

Gertrude Marianne Amalia Herzfeld (1890-1981), the first practicing female surgeon in Scotland, overcame bias against women in medicine and pediatric specialists in surgery. After her graduation from the University of Edinburgh Medical School (1914), she became the first female house surgeon at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Edinburgh. In 1920, she became the first practicing woman surgeon to become a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. She left a handful of publications in pediatric surgery: a "radical cure" for inguinal hernia, i.e., early surgery (1925); a review of abdominal surgery in infancy and childhood (1937); surgery for the acute abdomen (1939); and intestinal obstruction (1945). They offer a twenty-year window into how children's surgery was once practiced, when operations were done in patients' homes, and decisions for operation depended solely on the history and physical exam without laboratory testing and radiological imaging. As a series of snapshots over two decades, they reveal how her practice evolved in such areas as fluid resuscitation and radiological reduction of intussusception. She remained steadfast to a careful physical examination and early operation. While she did not document her practice in the care of children with ambiguous genitalia and intersex conditions, she approached the formidable anatomic, psychological, and social challenges of her patients and their families with patience and understanding. Herzfeld was devoted to the care of yet another marginalized population that today is subsumed by the acronym LGBTQIA, yet another area where she was far ahead of her time. Level of evidence: Level VII.


Subject(s)
Physicians, Women , Surgeons , Female , Humans , Surgeons/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Physicians, Women/history , Scotland
11.
J Cosmet Dermatol ; 22(2): 542-554, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35822229

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Officinal plants, minerals, animal derivatives, and miscellaneous have always been used to treat and improve appearance despite the different aesthetic canons of a specific historical and cultural context. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this work was to make a critical comparison between medieval and modern dermocosmetics analyzing the works of Trotula de Ruggiero, a female doctor of the 11th century teaching and working inside the illustrious "Medical School of Salerno," who devoted particular attention to the promotion of female care, beauty, and well-being. METHODS: We applied the historical-critical method analyzing the Latin text and the nglish translation of the standardized corpus of the main Trotula medieval manuscript De Ornatu Mulierum with a multidisciplinary scientific approach ranging from botany to pharmaceutical chemistry and technology, pharmacology and pathology. RESULTS: We identified the medicinal plants, derivatives of animal origin and minerals used in the recipes of Trotula, highlighting their biological properties in the light of current scientific knowledge. A critical comparison between medieval and modern dermocosmetics is reported also taking into consideration the chemical, pharmaceutical, and technological literature. CONCLUSION: Beyond the obvious changes in the paradigms of cosmetology and the different beauty canons of Middle Age with respect to modern times, our results emphasize the attention of Trotula to female care, beauty and well-being as well as the extraordinary combination of tradition and modernity in her work.


Subject(s)
Physicians, Women , Physicians , Female , Humans , History, Medieval , Schools, Medical/history , Physicians, Women/history
12.
Anesth Analg ; 135(2S Suppl 1): S14-S17, 2022 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35839828

ABSTRACT

This special article briefly discusses the role of women as the new journal Current Researches in Anesthesia and Analgesia (now Anesthesia & Analgesia [A&A]) began in 1922. It was a time of a few women physicians, and they were usually isolated from the world of mainstream medicine and its predominantly male practitioners The journal's founders, Frank McMechan and his wife Laurette of Cincinnati, were committed to developing an organization for everyone, and women physicians were welcomed early on. Three women physicians even served as the presidents of various anesthesia organizations early in the formation of the present national organization. This acceptance of women was to change as medical education and practice evolved to embrace scientific medicine, after the Flexner Report of 1910 documented the deficiencies of American medicine. Mrs McMechan made the most important contributions by a woman because she cared totally for Dr McMechan, after he experienced disabling and very severe arthritis. He became dependent on his wife for most activities, including the simple act of eating. He could not function without her; she kept him going physically for another 27 years after the onset of his very debilitating illness. After her husband's death in 1939, Mrs McMechan served an executive function, keeping the organization going and maintaining production of the journal. This article also briefly discusses the life of the first woman physician to publish an article in A&A, Frances Edith Haines, MD, of Chicago. Haines published several articles in the journal; the first was in 1922, in the second journal issue. She was the president of the Mid-Western Association of Anesthetists, an affiliated organization, in 1926. She also served in World War I as a contract physician anesthetist for the US Army; she was the first woman contract surgeon to go overseas, to Limoges, France. Her adventure-filled and bold life changed as she aged and developed financial problems. She tried, but failed, to get financial help from the government and the military for her war service, and she died in 1966. These women are examples of women physicians involved with the journal, as it began in 1922. As the number of women physicians has increased recently, some past problems, such as difficulty with getting admitted to medical schools, for example, have improved. However, there are still many issues for women in medicine, including in our specialty.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia , Anesthesiology , Military Personnel , Physicians, Women , Aged , Anesthesiologists , Anesthesiology/history , Female , Humans , Male , Physicians, Women/history
16.
Am Surg ; 88(2): 321-324, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33381976

ABSTRACT

Dr Nina Braunwald is celebrated for her work as the first female cardiothoracic surgeon and her key role in the design and implementation of the first prosthetic mitral valve. She began her residency at Bellevue Hospital in 1952, a time in the United States where the scope of women's work was limited. Once her training took her to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), her historic flexible leaflet valve was developed and Dr Braunwald paved an innovative step toward the advanced prostheses of today. Afterward, she was recognized by the American Board of Thoracic Surgery in 1963. Her extensive research and educational passion for cardiothoracic surgery led to numerous publications, a leadership role with the NIH, and associate professorship at University of California San Diego and Harvard; leaving behind a significant legacy to be memorialized in awards and fellowships to women in academic cardiac surgery. Her work inspired continued evolution of the prosthetic valve and countless women to pursue surgery as a career before passing away in 1992, leaving behind a new generation of women surgeons. Despite her successful career, she was never promoted to full professor by her academic institutions.


Subject(s)
Heart Valve Prosthesis/history , Mitral Valve , Physicians, Women/history , Thoracic Surgery/history , Boston , California , History, 20th Century , Humans , National Institutes of Health (U.S.) , Prosthesis Design/history , United States
17.
Acta Med Acad ; 50(2): 344-350, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34847689

ABSTRACT

This short biography traces the life and medical activities of Rosalie Sattler, née Feuerstein (1883-19??), who was employed as an official female physician at the Austro-Hungarian (AH) provincial public health department in Sarajevo from 1914-1919. Born in 1883 into a Jewish middle-class family in Chernivtsi (then Czernowitz), Ukraine, in Bukovina, the easternmost province in Austria, Feuerstein moved to Vienna in 1904 to study medicine. After earning her MD from Vienna University in 1909, she started her career as an assistant physician at the Kaiser Franz Josef Hospital in Vienna. In spring 1912, Feuerstein moved to Sarajevo to work as an intern at the local provincial hospital (Landeskrankenhaus). In the same year, she married AH district physician Moritz Sattler (1873-1927) in Vienna. In 1914, Sattler-Feuerstein successfully applied to be an AH official female physician in Bosnia. She was an employee of the provincial public health department in Sarajevo and never functioned as an official female physician in the sense of the relevant AH service ordinance. After the collapse of the monarchy, Sattler-Feuerstein continued to be employed as an official female physician of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. She resigned from service in 1919 and established herself as a private general practitioner in Sarajevo with her husband, who had also resigned as an official physician and started to practice privately at that point. Widowed in 1927, she left Sarajevo for an unknown destination, likely in 1938-1939, and vanished from historical records. CONCLUSION: Rosalie Sattler-Feuerstein (1883-19??) came to Bosnia as the eighth AH official female physician and worked as an employee of the AH provincial public health department in Sarajevo from 1914-1919, after which she practiced as a private physician in Sarajevo for more than 25 years.


Subject(s)
Physicians, Women , Bosnia and Herzegovina , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Physicians, Women/history
20.
Pediatrics ; 148(Suppl 2)2021 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34470878

ABSTRACT

Women in medicine have made progress since Elizabeth Blackwell: the first women to receive her medical degree in the United States in 1849. Yet although women currently represent just over one-half of medical school applicants and matriculates, they continue to face many challenges that hinder them from entering residency, achieving leadership positions that exhibit final decision-making and budgetary power, and, in academic medicine, being promoted. Challenges include gender bias in promotion, salary inequity, professional isolation, bullying, sexual harassment, and lack of recognition, all of which lead to higher rates of attrition and burnout in women physicians. These challenges are even greater for women from groups that have historically been marginalized and excluded, in all aspects of their career and especially in achieving leadership positions. It is important to note that, in several studies, it was indicated that women physicians are more likely to adhere to clinical guidelines, provide preventive care and psychosocial counseling, and spend more time with their patients than their male peers. Additionally, some studies reveal improved clinical outcomes with women physicians. Therefore, it is critical for health care systems to promote workforce diversity in medicine and support women physicians in their career development and success and their wellness from early to late career.


Subject(s)
Career Mobility , Physicians, Women/history , Sexism/history , Workforce/history , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Medicine
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