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
254 The Money Question in Early America
253 Life and Revolution in Boston and Grenada
252 The Highland Soldier in North America
251 Frontiers of Science
250 Virginia, 1619
249 BFW Road Trip: James Monroe's Highland
248 BFW Road Trip: National Museum of African American History and Culture
247 BFW Road Trip: Schoharie Crossing
246 BFW Road Trip: Château de Ramezay
245 Celebrating the Fourth
244 Shoe Stories From Early America
243 Revolutionary Print Networks
242 An Early History of Delaware
241 Pearls and the Nature of the Spanish Empire
240 Biography and a Biographer's Work
239 Travel and Post in Early America
238 Benedict Arnold
237 Motherhood in Early America
236 Mixed-Race Britons and the Atlantic Family
235 A 17th-Century Native American Life
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.)