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Women outnumber men in American medical schools, but in the operating room it's still an Old Boys' Club. Surgery remains a bastion of male privilege, prerogative, and power in American healthcare. But that is changing. On today's program, Se��n talks with three surgeons who understand firsthand the challenges faced by the women who routinely suffer insults and aggressions in an antiquated system.��
.
Julie Ann Sosa, M.D., MA, FACS, FSSO��
Chair, Department of Surgery�� (bio video)
Leon Goldman, M.D. Distinguished Professor of Surgery
Professor, Department of Medicine
Affiliated faculty, Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies
University of California, San Francisco
Editor-in-Chief
World Journal of Surgery
Soci��t�� Internationale de Chirurgie ��
.
Dr. Sosa on Twitter ��� Mastodon
.
.
Shenia Theodore, M.D.
Trauma & Acute Care Surgeon
Boston Medical Center
Boston University School of Medicine
.
Dr. Theodore on Twitter
.
.
M Cristy Smith, M.D., FACS
Cardiothoracic & Heart Transplant Surgeon
Surgical Director, Heart Transplant/Mechanical Circulatory Support
Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center
Spokane, Wash.
.
Dr. Smith on LinkedIn
.
,
.
The episode includes this piece by Brooklyn- and Berkshire mountains-based poet, Alexandra Beers, MS Ed., MFA:
.
Recovery
for Se��n Collins
.
They open your heart the way dentists open your mouth, as if they can just peek inside, and then they start with the loud drills and suction and all manner of vocabulary is tossed about and picking and pulling until they have cleaned you up, and afterward you are supposed to just spit and go on living the way you did, your teeth or your chest or your whole self sore for a bit, and you avoid hard candies and proceed with caution. Then you almost forget and you just bite and swallow and breathe easily again. Only if you are alive, really alive to this you are never the same. You are deeply in love with the people who fixed you and you want to stay in their care forever. Yet you must rise, rise each day to the blessing of blue true nothing of all knowingness that they bestowed on you as they sewed you up with the twine of science and grace and sent you out to join the rest of us. Be brave, and share.
���Alexandra Beers
.
.
.
��
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5
99 ratings
A transcript is available online
��
Women outnumber men in American medical schools, but in the operating room it's still an Old Boys' Club. Surgery remains a bastion of male privilege, prerogative, and power in American healthcare. But that is changing. On today's program, Se��n talks with three surgeons who understand firsthand the challenges faced by the women who routinely suffer insults and aggressions in an antiquated system.��
.
Julie Ann Sosa, M.D., MA, FACS, FSSO��
Chair, Department of Surgery�� (bio video)
Leon Goldman, M.D. Distinguished Professor of Surgery
Professor, Department of Medicine
Affiliated faculty, Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies
University of California, San Francisco
Editor-in-Chief
World Journal of Surgery
Soci��t�� Internationale de Chirurgie ��
.
Dr. Sosa on Twitter ��� Mastodon
.
.
Shenia Theodore, M.D.
Trauma & Acute Care Surgeon
Boston Medical Center
Boston University School of Medicine
.
Dr. Theodore on Twitter
.
.
M Cristy Smith, M.D., FACS
Cardiothoracic & Heart Transplant Surgeon
Surgical Director, Heart Transplant/Mechanical Circulatory Support
Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center
Spokane, Wash.
.
Dr. Smith on LinkedIn
.
,
.
The episode includes this piece by Brooklyn- and Berkshire mountains-based poet, Alexandra Beers, MS Ed., MFA:
.
Recovery
for Se��n Collins
.
They open your heart the way dentists open your mouth, as if they can just peek inside, and then they start with the loud drills and suction and all manner of vocabulary is tossed about and picking and pulling until they have cleaned you up, and afterward you are supposed to just spit and go on living the way you did, your teeth or your chest or your whole self sore for a bit, and you avoid hard candies and proceed with caution. Then you almost forget and you just bite and swallow and breathe easily again. Only if you are alive, really alive to this you are never the same. You are deeply in love with the people who fixed you and you want to stay in their care forever. Yet you must rise, rise each day to the blessing of blue true nothing of all knowingness that they bestowed on you as they sewed you up with the twine of science and grace and sent you out to join the rest of us. Be brave, and share.
���Alexandra Beers
.
.
.
��
��
��