Reviews
Harsh Medicine lays bare what so many clinicians from marginalized communities already know: the system often promises credit and support, but does not deliver. Dr. Grandis names these inequities with clarity and courage, and we need that honesty if we are going to eradicate them, together.
In Harsh Medicine, Grandis walks a difficult tightrope with grace: channeling righteous anger, born of personal experience and countless stories of gender-based discrimination, while delivering a clear-eyed analysis of both the problems and their potential solutions. It illuminates not only the toll these inequities take on the women who endure them, but also the damage they inflict on academic medicine itself. A timely and valuable contribution to our understanding of what must change–and how.
Women now make up 57% of all applicants to US medical schools and 55% of their graduates. Even in a specialty like otolaryngology in which 18% of practitioners are women, the proportion is growing. So what could be the problem? A lot, it turns out. As a practicing ear, nose, and throat surgeon and medical researcher, Jennifer Grandis travelled the country to interview practicing women and men doctors and scientists. This is a book that reveals a hidden world of disrespect for women, gone "underground," and the harshness of that. If you think gender bias in medicine is a matter of history, read this book.
Book Details
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Introduction
Section 1: Respect
1. Women Can't Be Experts: The Hostile Environment
2. Motherhood: The Catch-22 for Women
Section 2: Money
3. Money: What Are Women Worth
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Introduction
Section 1: Respect
1. Women Can't Be Experts: The Hostile Environment
2. Motherhood: The Catch-22 for Women
Section 2: Money
3. Money: What Are Women Worth?
4. More than Money: Resources Make Careers
Section 3: Relationships
5. Mentoring: Why It Matters
6. Unequal Relationships: Changing the Mentoring Culture
7. Lack of Mentoring: What You Don't Know Will Hurt You
8. Networks: Keeping Women Out of the Loop
Section 4: The Double Standard
9. The Double Standard: Are You Nice?
10. Women and Power: Leadership and Influence
Section 5: Conclusion
11. Conclusion: Blindness Is a Choice
Appendix A: Academic Medicine: A Cheat Sheet for Translating the Jargon
Appendix B: Solutions: A Practical Guide to Changing the Culture
Bibliography
Author Bio