Women make up eight out of every ten healthcare workers in the United States. Yet they lag behind men when it comes to working in the roles of medical doctors and surgeons.
Why has healthcare become a professional field dominated by women, and yet women represent a minority of physicians and doctors who serve at the top of the healthcare field?
Susan H. Brandt, a historian and lecturer at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, seeks to find answers to these questions. In doing so, she takes us into the rich history of women healers with details from her book, Women Healers: Gender, Authority, and Medicine in Early Philadelphia.
Show Notes: https://www.benfranklinsworld.com/379
Sponsor Links
Complementary Episodes
Listen!
Helpful Links
383 Aquatic Culture in Early America
382 Hessians in the American Revolutionary War
381 Texas in the Spanish Empire
380 The Tory's Wife
378 Everyday Black Living in Early America
377 Phillis Wheatley & the Playwright
376 Cotton Mather's Spanish Lessons
375 Misinformation Nation: Fake News in Early America
374 The American Revolutionary War in the West
373 The Gaspee Affair, 1772
372 A History of the Myaamia
371 An Archive of Indigenous Slavery
370 The Ruin of All Witches
369 Livestock and Animal Breeds in Early America
368 Legacies of the Brafferton Indian School
367 The Brafferton Indian School, Part 1
366 James Wilson & the U.S. Constitution
365 Road Trip 2023: Early Settlement at Île Ste. Jean
364 Road Trip 2023: La Pointe-Krebs House & Museum
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
American Revolution Podcast
Revolutions
Key Battles of the Revolutionary War
Dispatches: The Podcast of the Journal of the American Revolution
Patriot Lessons: American History and Civics (Constitution, Declaration of Independence, etc.)