We still have a long way to go

We still have a long way to go

Professor Rajini Rao is a tremendous role model along with Dr. Anandabi Joshee, Dr. Kei Okami, and Dr. Tabat M. Islambooly. If you don’t have Rajini circled, you are missing a lot.

Rajini’s post is very timely as I’ve been meaning to re-share Giselle Minoli’s post:

Open letter to men on G+

https://plus.google.com/u/0/+GiselleMinoli/posts/JVZ4LJ65Ffa

I think it’s best to visit the OP because the discussion is excellent and has many points that, unfortunately, don’t follow the re-share.

I think Dr.s Joshee, Okami, and Islambooly would be disappointed to find that, female physicians (after correcting for differences in specialties) make about $12,000 less than their male counterparts. As I said, we still have a ways to go.

Gender Differences in the Salaries of Physician Researchers posted by Adrienne Roehrich

http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleID=1182859

While searching for the above reference for the discussion in Giselle’s post, I stumbled onto this.

Hiring bias via Mark Brandt

https://plus.google.com/u/0/101829990343558867698/posts/aP3f3VuAe4V

Even in science, we have work to do. The study from PNAS reports that men and women scientist are biased towards hiring men and paying them more.

What can we do? For me, I strongly support programs that foster women in STEM such as Girlstart. I support equality at work and online. I support STEM Women on G+. Do you have other suggestions?

I’m pleased that G+ is, in general, very supportive of women in science and I have the pleasure of working with Rajini Rao Allison Sekuler Buddhini Samarasinghe Carissa Braun and Aubrey Francisco on ScienceSunday 

Originally shared by Rajini Rao

On The Shoulders of Giants

♀ A sepia print of an Indian woman, a Japanese woman and a woman from Syria, dated 1885. What do they have in common? Extraordinarily, each was the first licensed female medical doctor in their country of origin. They were trained at the Women’s Medical College in Pennsylvania, the first of its kind in the country. This was a time before women had the right to vote. If they did attend college at all, it was at the risk of contracting “neuralgia, uterine disease, hysteria, and other derangements of the nervous system” (according to Harvard gynecologist Edward H. Clarke). 

An all-woman medical school was first proposed in 1846, supported by the Quakers and the feminist movement. Dr. Ellwood Harvey, one of the early teaching faculty, daringly smuggled out a slave, Ann Maria Weems, dressed as a male buggy driver, from right outside the White House. With his reward money, he bought his students a  papier maché dissection mannequin. Eventually, poverty forced him to quit teaching, but he still helped out with odd jobs. What a magnificent man!  

Fate and fortune were to buffet Ms. Joshi’s life. Married at age 9 to a man 11 years older, her husband turned out to be surprisingly progressive. After she lost her first child at age 14, she vowed to render to her “poor suffering country women the true medical aid they so sadly stand in need of and which they would rather die than accept at the hands of a male physician”. She was first offered a scholarship by a missionary on condition that she converted to Christianity. When she demurred, a wealthy socialite from New Jersey stepped in and financed her education. She is believed to be the first Hindu woman to set foot on American soil. I didn’t arrive until 1983 😉

Times were tough then. The fate of these three intrepid pioneers was a sad one. Joshi died of tuberculosis in India at the age of 21, without ever practicing. Fittingly, her husband sent her ashes back to America. Islambouli was not heard of again, likely because she was never allowed to practice in her home country. Although Okami rose to the position of head of gynecology at a Tokyo hospital, she resigned two years later when the Emperor of Japan refused to meet her because she was a woman. 

Times have changed. My own mother was married at the age of 13 to a man also 11 years her senior. My father recalls helping my mother with her geography homework in high school. She never did attend college, despite being a charismatic woman with quicksilver wit and efficiency. Little wonder then, when I was accepted into graduate school in the US, unmarried and 21 years young, my parents staunchly stood behind me against the dire predictions of friends and relatives (“She’ll come back with a yellow haired American!” “Haven’t you read Cosmopolitan magazine? They are all perverts there!”). Happily, I escaped perversion, earned my doctoral degree and even gained a supportive spouse of my own. In 2004, I became only the 103rd woman to be promoted to Professor in the 111-year history of the Johns Hopkins medical school, and the first in my department, the oldest Physiology department in the country. If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants

#STEMwomen   #ScienceEveryday  

More reading: http://www.pri.org/stories/2013-07-15/historical-photos-circulating-depict-women-medical-pioneers

0 Comments

  1. Giselle Minoli
    April 12, 2014

    Bless you Chad Haney for sharing my post and continuing the discussion. YES Rajini Rao is amazing (but not just as a scientist…she seems able to comment about most everything, including growing flowers!), and YES we have a long way to go. I’m particularling grateful to you for the time you took to dig up the various studies and papers which you shared. Fundamentally, Chad Haney, may say that my own theory about why women are paid less it is that is a knee-jerk, animalistic response to territoriality. We become what we practice. And we become the circumstances of our lives…if we are not careful to make sure that doesn’t happen. Thus the birth of such things as a poverty mentality or a chaos mentality.

    For eons men have dominated the working world. This breeds a “this is my/our territory” mentality. In order for women to work side-by-side with parity with men, the mental shift needs to be “work, creativity, ideas, visioning the future, healing the planet, discovering cures for diseases, exploring the cosmos…whatever…” has nothing to do with whichever gender someone else, and everything to do with the contributions that both genders can make to this thing we call being human.

    Reply
  2. Chad Haney
    April 12, 2014

    Yes, Giselle Minoli and the same can be said for race in the USA. We have to look beyond gender and race, religion, etc.

    Regarding Rajini Rao, I confess I run out of superlatives to describe my admiration for her science, cooking, gardening, taste in music, humor, wordsmith, etc.

    Reply
  3. Rajini Rao
    April 12, 2014

    Chad Haney you’ve always been a staunch believer in diversity and equality, and a great friend both here and IRL. Thank you! 

    Giselle Minoli posted her thought provoking post on a day that I was running around at work..I remember plussing a few comments and wanting to return. Thanks for this reminder. Thanks for your kind words, Giselle 🙂

    Reply
  4. Buddhini Samarasinghe
    April 12, 2014

    Chad Haney thank you for writing this and sharing Rajini Raoa post, you’re a good friend and colleague and I am happy to be working with you.

    PS: gentle nag on finding a good cancer/imaging article for us to write together 🙂

    Reply
  5. Carissa Braun
    April 13, 2014

    A wonderful addition Chad Haney to Rajini Rao’s post. I enjoyed reading the additional links. I do love that the community on G+ has been, for the most part, very supportive of women in science, and you always come to mind as someone to promote equality. Thank you for that as well as your friendship 🙂  

    (And all the puns. You can never have too many puns, or at least, I haven’t reached that point yet.)

    Reply
  6. Chad Haney
    April 13, 2014

    My pleasure Buddhini Samarasinghe and Carissa Braun

    Reply
  7. Rajini Rao
    April 13, 2014

    Here’s to friends and puns! 

    Reply
  8. Chad Haney
    April 13, 2014

    I can’t imagine life without puns and you can’t have puns without friends.

    Reply
  9. Buddhini Samarasinghe
    April 13, 2014

    It’s been a while since we’ve had a #punderstorm…

    Reply
  10. Rajini Rao
    April 13, 2014

    We’ll have to rain all over some unsuspecting victim’s post one of these days. 

    Reply
  11. Chad Haney
    April 13, 2014

    We did get Letha McGarity’s post pretty overrun with puns. hehe I mean CSI would have had a field day with all the DNA we scattered on her post.

    Reply
  12. Chad Haney
    April 13, 2014

    Letha McGarity, what’s all over your genes? Be careful which detergent you use on your genes. You might destroy the evidence.

    Reply

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