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Women's health movement in the United States

The women's health movement (WHM, also feminist women's health movement) in the United States refers to the aspect of the American feminist movement that works to improve all aspects of women's health and healthcare. It began during the second wave of feminism as a sub-movement of the women's liberation movement. WHM activism involves increasing women's knowledge and control of their own bodies on a variety of subjects, such as fertility control and home remedies, as well as challenging traditional doctor-patient relationships, the medicalization of childbirth, misogyny in the health care system, and ensuring drug safety.

Notable organizations associated with the women's health movement include the Jane Collective, the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, the Feminist Abortion Network, the National Women's Health Network, the Black Women's Health Imperative and the Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center. Other results of WHM activism are the creation of feminist health centers, the Dalkon Shield lawsuit, the DES daughters lawsuit, and the Nelson Pill Hearings, which resulted in the inclusion of medication package inserts to insure informed consent for women taking oral contraceptive pills. Notable books and media resulting from this movement include Women and Madness by Phyllis Chesler, Our Bodies, Ourselves by the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm by Anne Koedt, and La Operación.

The WHM is unique from the abortion-rights movement in that the WHM has a wider scope of issues in relation to women and their health. The health clinics, groups, and activists of the WHM also advocate "nonprofessional caregivers, self-help, emphasis on alternative (nonprescription) remedies when possible, demystification of health information and providers, and clinic administration and control by nonprofessional women."[1]

Historical context edit

The women's health movement has origins in multiple movements within the United States: the popular health movement of the 1830s and 1840s, the struggle for women/midwives to practice medicine or enter medical schools in the late 1800s and early 1900s, black women's clubs that worked to improve access to healthcare, and various social movements in the 1960s.[2]

Helen Marieskind argues that like the popular health movement of the 19th century, the WHM worked to redefine health care, empower women, and support "preventive health concepts, self-awareness... [a] knowledge of bodily processes, and... demystify[ing] medicine."[3] Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English, in their work Witches, Midwives, and Nurses (1972), also compare the two movements.[4]

The WHM shares ideology with other New Left movements. The environmental and anti-nuclear movements, like the WHM, oppose militarism, critique corporations and government agencies, express the need to protect humans and the environment from hazards, and stress the importance of Nothing About Us Without Us.[5] Women and gender studies scholar Jennifer Nelson says that neighborhood health centers created by civil rights and other New Left activists were the "intellectual, political, and practical experiential precedents,"[6] for feminist health centers, which were one major result of the women's health movement.

The women's health movement grew directly out of the women's liberation movement during the late 1960s.

Women's liberation movement edit

Just as the Women's Suffrage movement grew out of the Abolition Movement, the Women's Liberation Movement grew out of the struggle for civil rights.[7][8] Though challenging patriarchy and the anti-patriarchal message of the Women's Liberation Movement was considered radical, it was not the only, nor the first, radical movement in the early period of second-wave feminism.[9] Rather than simply desiring legal equality, members believed that the moral and social climate in the United States needed to change. Though most groups operated independently—there was no national umbrella organization—there were unifying philosophies of women participating in the movement. Challenging patriarchy and the hierarchical organization of society which defined women as subordinate, participants in the movement believed that women should be free to define their own individual identity as part of human society.[7][8] One of the reasons that women who supported the movement chose not to create a single approach to addressing the problem of women being treated as second-class citizens was that they did not want to foster an idea that anyone was an expert or that any one group or idea could address all of the societal problems women faced.[10] They also wanted women, whose voices had been silenced, to be able to express their own views on solutions.[11] Among the issues were the objectification of women, reproductive rights, opportunities for women in the workplace, redefining familial roles. A dilemma faced by movement members was how they could challenge the definition of femininity without compromising the principals of feminism.[7] They were not interested in reforming existing social structures, but instead were focused on changing the perceptions of women's place in society and the family and women's autonomy. Rejecting hierarchical structure, most groups which formed operated as collectives where all women could participate equally. Typically, groups associated with the Women's Liberation Movement held consciousness-raising (CR) meetings where women could voice their concerns and experiences, learning to politicize their issues. To members of the WLM, rejecting sexism was the most important objective in eliminating women's status as second-class citizens.[citation needed]

By attending CR groups, women around the United States participated in "a process in which the sharing of personal stories led to a "click"--a sudden recognition that sexism lay at the root of their struggles."[12] This process included sharing their healthcare experiences with each other. They discussed topics such as illegal abortions, rape, negative experiences with doctors during childbirth and gynecologist visits, sexuality, birth control, and other aspects of women's health.[13][3] [14] This led them to "campaign to change how doctors, the government, the media, and the medical field treat...women and their bodies."[15]

Issues and ideology edit

WHM activism covers topics such as access to reproductive technology and birth control, sterilization abuse, advocating against unnecessary medical intervention during childbirth, increasing access to healthcare through the creation of feminist health centers and self-help clinics, teaching women about their bodies, discovering the history of women in medicine, critiquing the misogyny in the healthcare system, and creating health advocacy groups for women.[16][17][18] Due to the political and collective nature of the WHM, Helen Marieskind calls the ideology of the movement Feminist-Socialism.[3]

They view the relationship between women and their doctors (especially male gynecologists) as similar to women's second-class status in society. WHM activists argue that the institution of medicine is "embedded in, and an embodiment of,"[19] patriarchal society and is an institution of social control. Nearly all of the early literature from the WHM argued that medicine and doctors work to subordinate women, people of color, and the poor; doctors are too powerful; healthcare costs too much; and that conventional healthcare leaves patients with little to no dignity, right to health information, or ability to choose their treatment.[2]

1969–1973 edit

The women's liberation movement, and consequently the WHM, were grassroots, so there were many different groups of women organizing around women's health issues in the United States at the beginning of the second wave of feminism. Anthropologist Sandra Morgen argues that there are four founding events of the WHM: the workshop and research that lead to the writing of Our Bodies, Ourselves in Boston, the founding of the underground abortion service by the Jane Collective in Chicago, Carol Downer and Lorraine Rothman's self-help gynecology in Los Angeles, and Barbara Seaman's (New York) and Belita Cowan's (Ann Arbor) work to expose the health risks of the oral contraceptive pill and diethylstilbestrol.[20] Ninia Baehr includes the activism of Patricia Maginnis and the Army of Three–even though their activism around abortion began in 1959–because they were the first to frame abortion around women's rights and the idea that women, not doctors or lawmakers, should be the ones to make decisions around abortion.[21]

Society for Human Abortion and the Army of Three edit

“We will never give over the control of our numbers to the women themselves. What, let them control the future of the human race? With abortions it is in our hands; we make the decisions, and they must come to us.”[22]

– A male gynecologist to Margaret Sanger, as quoted in her autobiography

Patricia Maginnis founded the Citizens Committee for Humane Abortion Laws (CCHAL) in 1962, while she attended San Jose State University. In 1963, she moved the organization to San Francisco and Rowena Gurner joined CCHAL. In 1964, Gurner and Maginnis changed the organization's name to The Society for Humane Abortion (SHA) and in 1965 it was incorporated as a non-profit organization in California.[23] SHA advocated for "elective abortion,"[24] that all women had the right to safe and legal abortion free of harassment, and that "[the] termination of pregnancy is a decision which the person or family involved should be free to make as their own religious beliefs, values, emotions, and circumstances may dictate."[24] The SHA believed in the repeal of all abortion laws, including the 1963 Humane Abortion Act, which made abortion legal in cases of rape or incest. While still heading the Society for Humane Abortion, Maginnis set-up another organization in 1966 to carry on an underground feminist health referral system. The main mission of this organization, Association to Repeal Abortion Laws (ARAL), was to connect pregnant women with abortion providers in neighboring countries.[23] Their list of abortion specialists was well-researched and depended on members' information and the feedback of the women they referred.

Together, the Army of Three (Maginnis, Gurner, and Lana Phelan) planned and executed civil disobedience actions in the late 1960s in order to overturn abortion laws in California. In 1968, after multiple bouts of handing out pamphlets with information about contraception and sexually transmitted infections (which was illegal under San Francisco's Municipal Ordinance 188), Maginnis was arrested. The outcome of her case overturned this local ordinance, but the Army of Three wanted to challenge the state law. To do this, they created abortion 'classes,' which Maginnis was eventually arrest for in San Mateo county. The case wasn't settled until after Roe v. Wade liberalized abortion laws in the United States, but they did succeed in overturning California's abortion law.[25]

DES edit

Diethylstilbestrol (DES) was discovered in 1938 and until 1971, it was given to pregnant women with the incorrect belief that it would reduce the risk of pregnancy complications and losses.[26] In the late 1960s, a study published in JAMA endorsed the use of DES as an emergency contraceptive, saying that it have no negative side effects. Belita Cowan began researching the side effects of DES as a morning after pill at this time, because it was she had read medical literature that said DES caused clear cell carcinoma, a rare vaginal tumor, in girls and women who had been exposed to this medication in utero.[26] She also heard from her friends that the pill caused severe nausea for a short period of time.[27] Cowan brought together a group of female former patients at the University of Michigan’s student health center and organized Advocates for Medical Information.[28][29] This group aimed to educate women in the side effects of the DES pill and to oppose the use of it at the University Hospital and other health centers in the country. In 1971, the organization received a grant from the student government to undertake a survey of women who had taken DES. Out of the sixty-nine women who responded, only a quarter of them were contacted by doctors after taking the medication.[30] This proved that the advertisements for DES were fraudulent. After concluding her research about the side effects of DES, Cowan believed that women around the country should know about the effects of the drug.[31] She contacted Ralph Nader and other feminists to host a press conference in Washington, D.C., in December 1972.

 
An oral contraceptive pack.

Oral contraceptives edit

When the birth control pill came on the market in 1960, Barbara Seaman was writing columns for women's magazines such as Brides and the Ladies' Home Journal. She launched her career as a women's health journalist and brought a new kind of health reporting to the field, writing articles that centered more on the patient and less on the medical fads of the day. Seaman was first to reveal that women lacked the information they needed to make informed decisions on child-bearing, breast-feeding, and oral contraceptives. She even went so far as to alert women to the dangers of the Pill, whose primary ingredient was estrogen (also the active ingredient in Premarin, which had contributed to the death of her aunt). Prolific output and the popularity of her published articles won Seaman membership with the prestigious Society of Magazine Writers. In 1969, Seaman completed her first book, The Doctors' Case Against the Pill, which would become the basis for the Nelson Pill Hearings on the safety of the combined oral contraceptive pill.[32][33][34][35] As a result of the hearings, a health warning was added to the pill, the first informational insert for any prescription drug.[36] Robert Finch, Secretary of HEW, praised Seaman saying, "The Doctors' Case Against the Pill... was a major factor in our strengthening the language in the final warning published in the Federal Register to be included in each package of the Pill."

The Jane Collective edit

Officially known as the Abortion Counseling Service of Women's Liberation, the Jane Collective, or Jane, was an underground service in Chicago, Illinois, affiliated with the Chicago Women's Liberation Union that operated from 1969 to 1973, when abortion was illegal in the United States.[37] The collective was started by activists in the women's liberation movement in an effort to address the increasing number of unsafe abortions being performed by untrained providers. Since illegal abortions were not only dangerous but very expensive, the founding members of the collective believed that they could provide women with safer and more affordable access to abortions.

The collective originated in 1969 with University of Chicago student Heather Booth, who helped her friend's sister find an abortion provider.[38] The founders of Jane initially focused their attention on providing women access to competent physicians willing to provide abortion services. They found a physician they called "Mike" who was willing to work with them. After creating a close relationship with Mike they found out that he actually wasn't really a physician and some Jane activists have characterized him as a "con man." However, many of the techniques he used were safe and effective.[37] The women of Jane then decided to cut out the middleman and perform the abortions themselves. Mike taught the women how to perform dilation and curettage abortions, and from then on the women performed them themselves. During the years which Jane operated, the collective performed more than 11,000 abortions.[39] They disbanded after Roe v. Wade made abortion legal throughout the United States in 1973.

"I'm not anti-doctor, that would only help set back attitudes on modern medical technology. Women instead have to demystify doctors by learning more about their own bodies, and can then ask questions about gynecological examinations which have never been discussed thoroughly by doctors and their patients."

– Ellen Frankfort on her book Vaginal Politics, as quoted in The Crimson in 1972.[40]

Our Bodies, Ourselves edit

In 1969 at Emmanuel College in Boston, Massachusetts, at one of the first conference's for women's liberation, Nancy Miriam Hawley organized a workshop called "Women and Their Bodies." Twelve white, middle-class women between the ages of 23 and 39 attended the workshop, which allowed the women to discuss health. The discussion created a consciousness-raising environment; the strong discussion supplied the women with the necessary tools and ideas that led to the attendees organizing as "the doctors group" to research about women and healthcare. "We weren't encouraged to ask questions, but to depend on the so-called experts," Hawley told Women's eNews. "Not having a say in our own health care frustrated and angered us. We didn't have the information we needed, so we decided to find it on our own."[41] As a result of this goal, they spent the summer researching topics they were interested in and began teaching a course titled after the workshop, based on what they had learned and written about. It contained sections on abortion, pregnancy, postpartum depression, sexuality, anatomy and physiology, sexually transmitted diseases, and critiques of patriarchy, capitalism, and the healthcare system. The book also contained information intended to guide women on "how to maneuver the American health care system, with subsections called 'The Power and Role of Male Doctors,' 'The Profit Motive in Health Care,'" 'Women as Health Care Workers,' and 'Hospitals.'[42] They put their knowledge into an accessible format that served as a model for women who wanted to learn about themselves, communicate with doctors, and challenge the medical establishment to change and improve the health of women everywhere. They used rhetoric that avoided describing the female reproductive system as passive, unproductive, helpless, or powerless, unlike any doctor or book at the time.

Their writing was so sought after that they started selling their research as a 35-cent, 136-page booklet called Women and Their Bodies, published in 1970 by the New England Free Press. By 1973, 350,000 copies of the retitled Our Bodies, Ourselves had been sold without any formal advertising.[41] As a result of their success, the women formed the non-profit Boston Women's Health Book Collective (which now goes by the name Our Bodies Ourselves) and published the first 276-page Our Bodies, Ourselves in 1973. The collective published it with the major publisher Simon & Schuster, only on the condition that they would have complete editorial control and that nonprofit health centers could purchase copies at a significant discount.[42] It featured first-person stories from women, and tackled many topics then regarded as taboo.

 
A plastic speculum.

Self-help gynecology edit

Carol Downer joined a NOW chapter in California in 1969, where she learned about abortions and in 1970, helped refer women to Harvey Karman's illegal abortion clinic.[43] The Karman cannula was of particular interest to Downer, as it did not require cervical dilation, curettage, or powerful vacuum suction. Karman let them observe several abortions and an IUD insertion, during which Downer saw a woman's cervix for the first time and was "amazed"[44] at how close and accessible it was. This inspired her interest in performing abortions and to take a speculum home to perform a cervical examination on herself.

She and other women became interested in starting their own clinic after growing displeased with the male abortion providers’ behavior towards women. On April 7, 1971, a group of women (including Downer) interested in starting their own abortion clinic met at Everywoman's Bookstore in Venice, California.[43] Downer showed them what Karman used to perform abortions, but the women were afraid, and she knew that "until [she] demystified this for them, they were going to keep on thinking that abortion was this thing that you mostly would die of."[44] Downer then laid down on a table in the room and performed her own cervical examination in front of all the women, who were initially surprised but then crowded around her, observing her cervix. A few women wanted to see their own cervix's as well, so they did self-exams on the table after Downer.[44]

Lorraine Rothman also attended the meeting at the bookstore and she found Karman's device promising, but unsafe. She designed a new type of manual vacuum aspiration device, which she patented as the Del-Em, and called the process menstrual extraction (ME).[43] ME made its debut at the National Organization for Women conference in Santa Monica, California, in August 1971. To Rothman and Downer's dismay, the organizers of the conference were "so appalled that they refused to give the women exhibit space."[45] Instead, Downer and Rothman hung flyers around the conference, announcing a demonstration in their hotel room. The attendees were given a plastic speculum to begin their education. From the extensive mailing list collected during these demonstrations, Downer and Rothman began a national tour, going to 23 cities in the United States to teach women the new technique.[46][47][48] This effectively began the movement of women's health self-help groups/clinics.[49]

1974–1980 edit

National Women's Health Network edit

In 1974, Belita Cowan, Barbara Seaman, Phyllis Chesler, Mary Howell, and Alice Wolfson established the National Women's Health Network.

Rose Kushner's critique of radical mastectomies edit

 
A drawing of a radical mastectomy, during which muscle, lymph nodes, and the entire breast is removed.

After being diagnosed with breast cancer, Rose Kushner objected to the treatment which was then standard, in which a tumor biopsy and radical mastectomy (which involves removing muscle tissue and lymph nodes along with the breast) were performed in a single surgical operation while the patient was under anesthesia. She had difficulty finding a doctor who would perform a diagnostic biopsy and allow her to decide what action to take next.[50][51] In order to have a less invasive procedure, she had found Dr. Thomas Dao, who was willing to do a modified radical mastectomy.[52][50][53]

 
A drawing of a simple mastectomy, during which only breast tissue is removed.

As Kushner recovered from her surgery, she started writing about her experiences with breast cancer. She traveled to Europe to learn about breast cancer treatment there, finding that the radical mastectomy was not used as widely as in the United States. Upon her return home, she published Why Me?, in 1975 under the title Breast Cancer: A Personal History and Investigative Report, which contained extensive medical information and advice for patients, including strong criticism of radical mastectomies and the practice of performing a biopsy and a mastectomy as a one-step surgical procedure. Her critique of prevalent breast cancer treatment included strong feminist themes, such "No man is going to make another impotent while he's asleep without his permission, but there's no hesitation if it's a woman's breast."[53] The book was strongly endorsed by Dr. Dao, but it was widely criticized by other doctors and the American Cancer Society.[53] Kusher became a relentless critic of the treatment of breast cancer by the medical profession. She attended numerous meetings of medical professionals, interrupting presentations, questioning conclusions, and speaking against the prevalent practices of one-step breast cancer surgery and radical mastectomy.[53] In 1975 she was "booed off the stage" at a meeting of the Society of Surgical Oncology, whose members objected to her challenges to traditional treatments.[50]

In 1975 Kushner and Dorothy Johnston, established a telephone hotline called the Breast Cancer Advisory Center, based in Kensington, Maryland, that operated until 1982, responding to calls and letters from thousands of women wanting information about breast cancer and its treatment.[52][53] The center's establishment was motivated in part by Kushner's desire to promote patient self-help and mutual support, thus displacing the medical profession and the American Cancer Society from their roles as information "gatekeepers".[54]

In spite of her unpopularity with the mainstream medical profession, Kushner's work was well received in the public and won increasing respect in official circles. In June 1977, she was the only lay member appointed to a ten-member National Institutes of Health (NIH) panel that evaluated treatment options for primary breast cancer. In 1979, the panel issued its findings, concluding that the Halsted radical mastectomy should no longer be the standard treatment for suspected cases of breast cancer, instead recommending total simple mastectomy as the primary surgical treatment.[55][53] Additionally, Kushner convinced her fellow panel members to include a statement calling for an end to the one-step surgical procedure.[56] At the time of her death, Dr. Bruce A. Chabner of the National Cancer Institute said she was "probably the single most important person" in ending the practice of one-step surgery for breast cancer, because of her persistence and because she brought medical information to a wide public audience that otherwise might have remained unaware of the options.[50]

Challenging sexism in medicine

In medical schools edit

Two laws in the United States lifted restrictions for women in the medical field -- Title IX of the Higher Education Act Amendments of 1972 and the Public Health Service Act of 1975, banning discrimination on grounds of gender. In November 1970, the Assembly of the Association of American Medical Colleges rallied for equal rights in the medical field.[57]

The 1970s marked a great increase of women entering and graduating from medical school in the United States. From 1930 to 1970, a period of 40 years, about 14,000 women graduated from medical school. From 1970 to 1980, a period of 10 years, over 20,000 women graduated from medical school.[57] This increase of women in the medical field was due to both political and cultural changes.

One study surveyed physician mothers and their physician daughters in order to analyze the effect that discrimination and harassment have on the individual and their career. This study included 84% of physician mothers that graduated medical school prior to 1970, with the majority of these physicians graduating in the 1950s and 1960s. The authors of this study stated that discrimination in the medical field persisted after the title VII discrimination legislation was passed in 1965.[58] According to this study, one third of physician daughters reported experiencing a form of gender discrimination in medical school, field training, and the work environment. This study also stated that both generations equally experienced gender discrimination within their work environments.

This article provided an overview on the history of gender discrimination, claiming that gender initiated the systematic exclusion of women from medical schools. This was the case until 1970, when the National Organization for Women (NOW) filed a class action lawsuit against all medical schools in the United States.  More specifically, this lawsuit was successful in forcing medical schools to comply to the civil rights legislation. This success was seen by 1975 when the number of women in medicine had nearly tripled, and continued to grow as the years progressed. By 2005, over 25% of physicians and around 50% of medical school students were women. The increase of women in medicine also came with an increase of women identifying as a racial/ethnic minority, yet this population is still largely underrepresented in comparison to the general population of the medical field.[58] Within this specific study, 22% of physician mothers and 24% of physician daughters identified themselves as being an ethnic minority. These women reported experiencing instances of exclusion from career opportunities as a result of their race and gender.

Between doctors and female patients edit

A sharp increase of women in the medical field led to developments in doctor patient relationships, changes in terminology, and theory. With higher numbers of women enrolled in medical school, medical practices like gynecology were challenged and changed. One area of medical practice that was challenged and changed was gynecology. Wendy Kline discusses the blurring of the medical and sexual that occurred in the medical field in the late 40s into the 60s, particularly in gynecology. Kline says that "to ensure that young brides were ready for the wedding night, they [doctors] used the pelvic exam as a form of sex instruction."[59] In Ellen Frankfort's book Vaginal Politics, Frankfort talks about the "shame" and "humiliation" felt during a pap test; "I was naked, he was dressed; I was lying down, he was standing up; I was quiet, he was giving orders."[60] One medical student is quoted in Kline's book as saying, "Since I experienced my own exams as a humiliating procedure, I feared inflicting the same humiliation on another person."[59] In 1972 the University of Iowa Medical School instituted a new training program for pelvic and breast examinations. Students would act both as the doctor and the patient, allowing each student to understand the procedure and create a more gentle, respectful examination. This method was quite different from the previous practice in which doctors were taught to assert their power over patients. With changes in ideologies and practices throughout the 70s, by 1980 over 75 schools had adopted this new method.[61]

Legacy edit

Tanfer Emin Tunc argues that the Army of Three, the Jane collective, and Downer and Rothman's menstrual extraction technique have contributed to abortion technology in America.[62]

Timeline edit

Media edit

List of associated media edit

Periodicals edit

  • The Monthly Extract. (Lolly and Jeanne Hirsch)  1974-1978.
  • Health Right. (Women's Health Forum)  1975.
  • Women and Health. (SUNY at Old Westbury)  1976.
  • The Newsalert. (National Women's Health Network)  1976.

Books edit

  • Chesler, Phyllis (1972). Women and Madness. New York: Avon Books.
  • Frankfort, Ellen. Vaginal Politics.
  • Haire, Doris (1972). "The Cultural Warping of Childbirth". Icea News. Seattle: International Childbirth Education Association. 11 (1): 5–35. PMID 12261812.
  • Seaman, Barbara (1972). Free and Female. Greenwich: Fawcett Crest.
  • Boston Women's Health Book Collective (1973). Our Bodies, Ourselves. Simon & Schuster.
  • Ehrenreich, Barbara; English, Deirdre (1973). Complaints and Disorders: The Sexual Politics of Sickness.
  • A New View of a Woman's Body. Federation of Feminist Women's Health Centers.
  • How to Stay Out of the Gynecologists Office. Federation of Feminist Women's Health Centers.
  • Rich, Adrienne (1976). Of Woman Born. New York: W. W. Norton and Co.
  • Dreifus, Claudia, ed. (1977). Seizing Our Bodies: The Politics of Women's Health. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0394723600.
  • Kushner, Rose (1977). Why Me? What Every Woman Should Know About Breast Cancer To Save Her Life. New York: New American Library. ISBN 9780451076922.
  • Walsh, Mary Roth (1977). Doctors Wanted: No Women Need Apply: Sexual barriers in the medical profession, 1835-1975. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press.
  • Ehrenreich, Barbara; English, Deirdre (1978). For Her Own Good: Two Centuries of the Experts' Advice to Women.
  • Ehrenreich, John, ed. (1978). The Cultural Crisis of Modern Medicine. New York: Monthly Review Press.
  • Kushner, Rose (1985), Alternatives: New Developments in the War Against Breast Cancer, Warner Books. ISBN 0446345873, ISBN 978-0-446-34587-3, ISBN 0-446-34587-3
  • Downer, Carol; Chalker, Rebecca (1992). A Woman's Book of Choices. Four Walls Eight Windows.

Essays, articles, and pamphlets edit

  • Koedt, Anne (1970). The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm (PDF). Somerville, Massachusetts: New England Free Press. OCLC 2393445.
  • Weisstein, Naomi (1971). Psychology Constructs the Female (PDF). Somerville, Massachusetts: New England Free Press.
  • Ehrenreich, Barbara; English, Deirdre (1972). Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women Healers (PDF). Somerville, Massachusetts: New England Free Press.
  • Dodson, Betty (1972). Liberating Masturbation (PDF). Union, New Jersey: Sensory Research Corp.
  • Kushner, Rose (1984), Is Aggressive Adjuvant Chemotherapy the Halsted Radical of the '80s?, CA Cancer J Clin 1984; 34:345-351. doi:10.3322/canjclin.34.6.345

Documentaries edit

  • La Operación
  • No Going Back: A Pro-Choice Perspective (Documentary). Produced by Carol Downer, directed by Irene Schonwit, written by Regina Leeds. 1988.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)- Video which presents menstrual extraction as an abortion method that can be used by women in self-help health groups.

Notable people edit

Notable activists edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Morgen 2002, p. 149.
  2. ^ a b Morgen 2002, p. 121.
  3. ^ a b c Marieskind, Helen (1975). "The Women's Health Movement". International Journal of Health Services. 5 (2): 217–223. doi:10.2190/5xun-vx3h-kmwm-f17m. ISSN 0020-7314. PMID 1102467. S2CID 6198144.
  4. ^ Goldner, Melinda (2017). "Women's Health Social Movements". In McCammon, Holly J; Taylor, Verta; Reger, Jo; Einwohner, Rachel L (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Women's Social Movement Activism. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190204204.013.14.
  5. ^ Silliman, Jael (1997). "Making the Connections: Women's Health and Environmental Justice". Race, Gender & Class. Environmentalism and Race, Gender, Class Issues. 5 (1): 104–129. JSTOR 41674851.
  6. ^ Nelson, Jennifer (2015). More than medicine : a history of the feminist women's health movement. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 9780814762776. OCLC 883881426.
  7. ^ a b c Wiegers, Mary (22 March 1970). "Women's Liberation—What Is It All About?". The Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. 50. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^ a b "Involvement Is Key To Pat's Liberation". The Dayton Daily News. Dayton, Ohio. 26 October 1969. p. 11. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Thompson, Becky (Summer 2002). (PDF). Feminist Studies. 28 (2): 337–360. doi:10.2307/3178747. ISSN 0046-3663. JSTOR 3178747. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 April 2018. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  10. ^ Foley, Eileen (29 January 1971). "The Many Facets of Women's Lib". The Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. p. 22. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Bennett, Lorraine M. (5 April 1970). "How Far Yet to Go, Baby?". The Atlanta Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. p. 40. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Kline 2010, p. 13.
  13. ^ Ruzek 1978.
  14. ^ Seaman & Eldridge 2012, p. 2.
  15. ^ Fahs, Breanne (2016). "Women's Health Movement in the United States". The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies. pp. 1–4. doi:10.1002/9781118663219.wbegss119. ISBN 9781405196949.
  16. ^ Boles, Janet K.; Hoeveler, Diane Long (1996). Historical Dictionary of Feminism. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. pp. 300. ISBN 978-0810830424. OCLC 32545162.
  17. ^ Davis, Nanette J. (1985). From crime to choice : the transformation of abortion in America. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. pp. 33. ISBN 978-0313249297. OCLC 11970627.
  18. ^ Reverby, Susan M. (2002). "Feminism & Health". Health and History. 4 (1): 5–19. doi:10.2307/40111418. JSTOR 40111418.
  19. ^ Ruzek 1978, p. 65.
  20. ^ Morgen 2002, p. 8-11.
  21. ^ Baehr 1990, p. 4-5.
  22. ^ Sanger, Margaret (1938). Margaret Sanger: An Autobiography. W. W. Norton. p. 287.
  23. ^ a b "Society for Humane Abortion. Records of the Society for Humane Abortion, 1962-1979 (inclusive), 1963-1975 (bulk): A Finding Aid". oasis.lib.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2016-03-07.
  24. ^ a b "When Abortion Was a Crime". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2016-03-07.
  25. ^ Brown, Lori A. (2016-05-13). Contested Spaces: Abortion Clinics, Women's Shelters and Hospitals: Politicizing the Female Body. Routledge. ISBN 9781317160328.
  26. ^ a b Veurink M, Koster M, Berg LT (June 2005). "The history of DES, lessons to be learned". Pharm World Sci. 27 (3): 139–43. doi:10.1007/s11096-005-3663-z. PMID 16096877. S2CID 12630813.
  27. ^ Holmes, H.B.; Hoskins, B.B.; Gross, M. (1981). Birth Control and Controlling Birth: Women-Centered Perspectives. Contemporary Issues in Biomedicine, Ethics, and Society. Humana Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-89603-022-0. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  28. ^ Morgen 2002, p. 10.
  29. ^ Prescott, H.M. (2011). The Morning After: A History of Emergency Contraception in the United States. Critical Issues in Health and Medicine. Rutgers University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-8135-5217-0. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  30. ^ Dutton, D.B.; Preston, T.A.; Pfund, N.E. (1992). Worse Than the Disease: Pitfalls of Medical Progress. Pitfalls of Medical Progress. Cambridge University Press. p. 324. ISBN 978-0-521-39557-1. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  31. ^ Seaman, Barbara (2009). "Health Activism, American Feminist". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 2019-02-27.
  32. ^ "Senate Hearings on the Pill". PBS. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  33. ^ L, Fiona (2012). "How Far We Haven't Come: Remembering the Nelson Pill Hearings - Women's Media Center". Women's Media Center. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  34. ^ "How the Pill Gave Birth to the Women's Health Movement". Society for Menstrual Cycle Research. 2010-05-25. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  35. ^ "The Pill Kills: Women's Health and Feminist Activism". Nursing Clio. 2017-04-27. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  36. ^ "Barbara Seaman | Jewish Women's Archive". jwa.org. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  37. ^ a b Jane: Documents from Chicago's Clandestine Abortion Service (1968-1973) [Pamphlet]. Baltimore, MD: Firestarter Press, 2004. Retrieved from Interference Archive Pamphlets.
  38. ^ Baumgardner, Jennifer (2008). Abortion & Life. New York: Akashic Books. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-933354-59-0.
  39. ^ Bart, Pauline B. (2002). Historical and Multicultural Encyclopedia of Women's Reproductive Rights in the United States. Westport, CT [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. pp. 119–121. ISBN 978-0-313-30644-0.
  40. ^ "Frankfort Describes 'Vaginal Politics'". The Crimson. 2 December 1972.
  41. ^ a b Ginty, Molly M. (May 4, 2004). . Women's eNews. Archived from the original on September 3, 2009. Retrieved August 26, 2012.
  42. ^ a b Schneir, Miriam. "Boston Women's Health Book Collective." Feminism in Our Time: The Essential Writings, World War II to the Present. New York: Vintage, 1994. 352. Print.
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  44. ^ a b c Dudley Shotwell, Hannah Grace (2016). Empowering the body : the evolution of self-help in the women's health movement. [University of North Carolina at Greensboro]. pp. 23–27. OCLC 979987332.
  45. ^ Woo, Elaine (October 3, 2007). "Lorraine Rothman, 75; feminist clinic's co-founder helped demystify gynecology". Obituaries. Los Angeles Times.
  46. ^ Chalker, Rebecca; Downer, Carol (1992). A Woman's Book of Choices, Abortion, Menstrual Extraction, RU-486. New York: Four Walls Eight Windows. ISBN 978-0941423861.
  47. ^ Davis, Flora (1991). Moving the Mountain: The Women's Movement in America since 1960. New York: Simon Schuster. p. 233. ISBN 9780671792923.
  48. ^ Morgen 2002, p. 8.
  49. ^ a b c Morgen 2002, p. 22-24.
  50. ^ a b c d Gina Kolata, Rose Kushner, 60, Leader in Breast Cancer Fight, The New York Times, January 10, 1990
  51. ^ Barron H Lerner (2001), No shrinking violet: Rose Kushner and the rise of American breast cancer activism, The Western Journal of Medicine, 174(5): 362–365; May 2001
  52. ^ a b Judith Rosenbaum, Rose Kushner, Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. 1 March 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved October 5, 2009
  53. ^ a b c d e f Barron H. Lerner (2003), The breast cancer wars: hope, fear, and the pursuit of a cure in twentieth-century America, Oxford University Press US, ISBN 0-19-516106-8, ISBN 978-0-19-516106-9
  54. ^ Anne S. Kasper and Susan J. Ferguson (2001), Breast Cancer: Society Shapes an Epidemic, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-312-29451-4, ISBN 978-0-312-29451-9, page 327
  55. ^ Kushner, Rose. Papers, 1953-1990, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College, July 1999
  56. ^ Lerner, Barron H (May 2001). "No shrinking violet: Rose Kushner and the rise of American breast cancer activism". West J Med. 174 (5): 362–365. doi:10.1136/ewjm.174.5.362. PMC 1071404. PMID 11342526.
  57. ^ a b Restructuring 1990, p. 236.
  58. ^ a b Shrier, Diane K.; Zucker, Alyssa N.; Mercurio, Andrea E.; Landry, Laura J.; Rich, Michael; Shrier, Lydia A. (2007). "Generation to Generation: Discrimination and Harassment Experiences of Physician Mothers and Their Physician Daughters". Journal of Women's Health16 (6): 1–13. doi:10.1089/jwh.2006.0127
  59. ^ a b Kline 2010, p. 44.
  60. ^ Frankfort, Ellen (1970). Vaginal Politics. New York: Vintage. p. 60. as quoted in Kline 2010, p. 43
  61. ^ Restructuring 1990, p. 241.
  62. ^ Tunc, Tanfer Emin (August 2007). "Innovators and instigators: Feminist contributions to American abortion technology, 1963-1973" (PDF). Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care. 33 (3): 149–54. doi:10.1783/147118907781004723. PMID 17609070. S2CID 30017608.

Sources edit

  • Baehr, Ninia (1990). Abortion Without Apology: A Radical History for the 1990s. Boston: South End Press. ISBN 978-0896083844.
  • Kline, Wendy (2010-10-15). Bodies of Knowledge: Sexuality, Reproduction, and Women's Health in the Second Wave. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226443089.
  • Morgen, Sandra (2002). Into Our Own Hands: The Women's Health Movement in the United States, 1969-1990. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0813530703. OCLC 48077521.
  • Ruzek, Sheryl Burt (1978). The women's health movement : feminist alternatives to medical control. New York: Praeger. ISBN 978-0030414367. OCLC 4056590.
  • Paludi, Michele A.; Streuernage, Gertrude A., eds. (1990). Foundations for a Feminist Restructuring of the Academic Disciplines. New York: Harrington Park Press.
  • Seaman, Barbara; Eldridge, Laura, eds. (2012). Voices of the Women's Health Movement: volume 1. New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 9781609804442. OCLC 610144564.

Further reading edit

  • Davis, Flora (1991). "The Women's Health Movement". Moving the Mountain: The Women's Movement in American since 1960. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0671602079.
  • Fahs, Breanne (2015). "The Body in Revolt: The Impact and Legacy of Second Wave Corporeal Embodiment". Journal of Social Issues. 71 (2): 386–401. doi:10.1111/josi.12117.
  • Hart, Evan (2007). Building a More Inclusive Women's Health Movement: Byllye Avery and the Development of the National Black Women's Health Project, 1981-1990 (Graduate thesis). University of Cincinnati.
  • Heide, Wilma Scott (1978), "Feminism: Making a Difference in Our Health", The Woman Patient, Springer US, pp. 9–19, doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-8840-5_2, ISBN 9781461588429
  • Nilsson, Jeff; Warren, Maude Radford (January 14, 2016). "The Fight for Women Doctors". Saturday Evening Post. Retrieved 2019-01-25.
  • Patterson, Elizabeth C. (2017-02-06). "Doctors Wanted: No Women Need Apply and The Hidden Malpractice". American Scientist. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
  • "The Women's Health Movement". Click! The Ongoing Feminist Revolution. Clio Visualizing History. 2019.

women, health, movement, united, states, women, health, movement, also, feminist, women, health, movement, united, states, refers, aspect, american, feminist, movement, that, works, improve, aspects, women, health, healthcare, began, during, second, wave, femi. The women s health movement WHM also feminist women s health movement in the United States refers to the aspect of the American feminist movement that works to improve all aspects of women s health and healthcare It began during the second wave of feminism as a sub movement of the women s liberation movement WHM activism involves increasing women s knowledge and control of their own bodies on a variety of subjects such as fertility control and home remedies as well as challenging traditional doctor patient relationships the medicalization of childbirth misogyny in the health care system and ensuring drug safety Notable organizations associated with the women s health movement include the Jane Collective the Boston Women s Health Book Collective the Feminist Abortion Network the National Women s Health Network the Black Women s Health Imperative and the Native American Women s Health Education Resource Center Other results of WHM activism are the creation of feminist health centers the Dalkon Shield lawsuit the DES daughters lawsuit and the Nelson Pill Hearings which resulted in the inclusion of medication package inserts to insure informed consent for women taking oral contraceptive pills Notable books and media resulting from this movement include Women and Madness by Phyllis Chesler Our Bodies Ourselves by the Boston Women s Health Book Collective The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm by Anne Koedt and La Operacion The WHM is unique from the abortion rights movement in that the WHM has a wider scope of issues in relation to women and their health The health clinics groups and activists of the WHM also advocate nonprofessional caregivers self help emphasis on alternative nonprescription remedies when possible demystification of health information and providers and clinic administration and control by nonprofessional women 1 Contents 1 Historical context 1 1 Women s liberation movement 2 Issues and ideology 3 1969 1973 3 1 Society for Human Abortion and the Army of Three 3 2 DES 3 3 Oral contraceptives 3 4 The Jane Collective 3 5 Our Bodies Ourselves 3 6 Self help gynecology 4 1974 1980 4 1 National Women s Health Network 4 2 Rose Kushner s critique of radical mastectomies 5 Challenging sexism in medicine 5 1 In medical schools 5 2 Between doctors and female patients 6 Legacy 7 Timeline 8 Media 8 1 List of associated media 8 1 1 Periodicals 8 1 2 Books 8 1 3 Essays articles and pamphlets 8 1 4 Documentaries 9 Notable people 9 1 Notable activists 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Sources 11 Further readingHistorical context editThe women s health movement has origins in multiple movements within the United States the popular health movement of the 1830s and 1840s the struggle for women midwives to practice medicine or enter medical schools in the late 1800s and early 1900s black women s clubs that worked to improve access to healthcare and various social movements in the 1960s 2 Helen Marieskind argues that like the popular health movement of the 19th century the WHM worked to redefine health care empower women and support preventive health concepts self awareness a knowledge of bodily processes and demystify ing medicine 3 Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English in their work Witches Midwives and Nurses 1972 also compare the two movements 4 The WHM shares ideology with other New Left movements The environmental and anti nuclear movements like the WHM oppose militarism critique corporations and government agencies express the need to protect humans and the environment from hazards and stress the importance of Nothing About Us Without Us 5 Women and gender studies scholar Jennifer Nelson says that neighborhood health centers created by civil rights and other New Left activists were the intellectual political and practical experiential precedents 6 for feminist health centers which were one major result of the women s health movement The women s health movement grew directly out of the women s liberation movement during the late 1960s Women s liberation movement edit Just as the Women s Suffrage movement grew out of the Abolition Movement the Women s Liberation Movement grew out of the struggle for civil rights 7 8 Though challenging patriarchy and the anti patriarchal message of the Women s Liberation Movement was considered radical it was not the only nor the first radical movement in the early period of second wave feminism 9 Rather than simply desiring legal equality members believed that the moral and social climate in the United States needed to change Though most groups operated independently there was no national umbrella organization there were unifying philosophies of women participating in the movement Challenging patriarchy and the hierarchical organization of society which defined women as subordinate participants in the movement believed that women should be free to define their own individual identity as part of human society 7 8 One of the reasons that women who supported the movement chose not to create a single approach to addressing the problem of women being treated as second class citizens was that they did not want to foster an idea that anyone was an expert or that any one group or idea could address all of the societal problems women faced 10 They also wanted women whose voices had been silenced to be able to express their own views on solutions 11 Among the issues were the objectification of women reproductive rights opportunities for women in the workplace redefining familial roles A dilemma faced by movement members was how they could challenge the definition of femininity without compromising the principals of feminism 7 They were not interested in reforming existing social structures but instead were focused on changing the perceptions of women s place in society and the family and women s autonomy Rejecting hierarchical structure most groups which formed operated as collectives where all women could participate equally Typically groups associated with the Women s Liberation Movement held consciousness raising CR meetings where women could voice their concerns and experiences learning to politicize their issues To members of the WLM rejecting sexism was the most important objective in eliminating women s status as second class citizens citation needed By attending CR groups women around the United States participated in a process in which the sharing of personal stories led to a click a sudden recognition that sexism lay at the root of their struggles 12 This process included sharing their healthcare experiences with each other They discussed topics such as illegal abortions rape negative experiences with doctors during childbirth and gynecologist visits sexuality birth control and other aspects of women s health 13 3 14 This led them to campaign to change how doctors the government the media and the medical field treat women and their bodies 15 Issues and ideology editWHM activism covers topics such as access to reproductive technology and birth control sterilization abuse advocating against unnecessary medical intervention during childbirth increasing access to healthcare through the creation of feminist health centers and self help clinics teaching women about their bodies discovering the history of women in medicine critiquing the misogyny in the healthcare system and creating health advocacy groups for women 16 17 18 Due to the political and collective nature of the WHM Helen Marieskind calls the ideology of the movement Feminist Socialism 3 They view the relationship between women and their doctors especially male gynecologists as similar to women s second class status in society WHM activists argue that the institution of medicine is embedded in and an embodiment of 19 patriarchal society and is an institution of social control Nearly all of the early literature from the WHM argued that medicine and doctors work to subordinate women people of color and the poor doctors are too powerful healthcare costs too much and that conventional healthcare leaves patients with little to no dignity right to health information or ability to choose their treatment 2 1969 1973 editThe women s liberation movement and consequently the WHM were grassroots so there were many different groups of women organizing around women s health issues in the United States at the beginning of the second wave of feminism Anthropologist Sandra Morgen argues that there are four founding events of the WHM the workshop and research that lead to the writing of Our Bodies Ourselves in Boston the founding of the underground abortion service by the Jane Collective in Chicago Carol Downer and Lorraine Rothman s self help gynecology in Los Angeles and Barbara Seaman s New York and Belita Cowan s Ann Arbor work to expose the health risks of the oral contraceptive pill and diethylstilbestrol 20 Ninia Baehr includes the activism of Patricia Maginnis and the Army of Three even though their activism around abortion began in 1959 because they were the first to frame abortion around women s rights and the idea that women not doctors or lawmakers should be the ones to make decisions around abortion 21 Society for Human Abortion and the Army of Three edit We will never give over the control of our numbers to the women themselves What let them control the future of the human race With abortions it is in our hands we make the decisions and they must come to us 22 A male gynecologist to Margaret Sanger as quoted in her autobiographyPatricia Maginnis founded the Citizens Committee for Humane Abortion Laws CCHAL in 1962 while she attended San Jose State University In 1963 she moved the organization to San Francisco and Rowena Gurner joined CCHAL In 1964 Gurner and Maginnis changed the organization s name to The Society for Humane Abortion SHA and in 1965 it was incorporated as a non profit organization in California 23 SHA advocated for elective abortion 24 that all women had the right to safe and legal abortion free of harassment and that the termination of pregnancy is a decision which the person or family involved should be free to make as their own religious beliefs values emotions and circumstances may dictate 24 The SHA believed in the repeal of all abortion laws including the 1963 Humane Abortion Act which made abortion legal in cases of rape or incest While still heading the Society for Humane Abortion Maginnis set up another organization in 1966 to carry on an underground feminist health referral system The main mission of this organization Association to Repeal Abortion Laws ARAL was to connect pregnant women with abortion providers in neighboring countries 23 Their list of abortion specialists was well researched and depended on members information and the feedback of the women they referred Together the Army of Three Maginnis Gurner and Lana Phelan planned and executed civil disobedience actions in the late 1960s in order to overturn abortion laws in California In 1968 after multiple bouts of handing out pamphlets with information about contraception and sexually transmitted infections which was illegal under San Francisco s Municipal Ordinance 188 Maginnis was arrested The outcome of her case overturned this local ordinance but the Army of Three wanted to challenge the state law To do this they created abortion classes which Maginnis was eventually arrest for in San Mateo county The case wasn t settled until after Roe v Wade liberalized abortion laws in the United States but they did succeed in overturning California s abortion law 25 DES edit Diethylstilbestrol DES was discovered in 1938 and until 1971 it was given to pregnant women with the incorrect belief that it would reduce the risk of pregnancy complications and losses 26 In the late 1960s a study published in JAMA endorsed the use of DES as an emergency contraceptive saying that it have no negative side effects Belita Cowan began researching the side effects of DES as a morning after pill at this time because it was she had read medical literature that said DES caused clear cell carcinoma a rare vaginal tumor in girls and women who had been exposed to this medication in utero 26 She also heard from her friends that the pill caused severe nausea for a short period of time 27 Cowan brought together a group of female former patients at the University of Michigan s student health center and organized Advocates for Medical Information 28 29 This group aimed to educate women in the side effects of the DES pill and to oppose the use of it at the University Hospital and other health centers in the country In 1971 the organization received a grant from the student government to undertake a survey of women who had taken DES Out of the sixty nine women who responded only a quarter of them were contacted by doctors after taking the medication 30 This proved that the advertisements for DES were fraudulent After concluding her research about the side effects of DES Cowan believed that women around the country should know about the effects of the drug 31 She contacted Ralph Nader and other feminists to host a press conference in Washington D C in December 1972 nbsp An oral contraceptive pack Oral contraceptives edit When the birth control pill came on the market in 1960 Barbara Seaman was writing columns for women s magazines such as Brides and the Ladies Home Journal She launched her career as a women s health journalist and brought a new kind of health reporting to the field writing articles that centered more on the patient and less on the medical fads of the day Seaman was first to reveal that women lacked the information they needed to make informed decisions on child bearing breast feeding and oral contraceptives She even went so far as to alert women to the dangers of the Pill whose primary ingredient was estrogen also the active ingredient in Premarin which had contributed to the death of her aunt Prolific output and the popularity of her published articles won Seaman membership with the prestigious Society of Magazine Writers In 1969 Seaman completed her first book The Doctors Case Against the Pill which would become the basis for the Nelson Pill Hearings on the safety of the combined oral contraceptive pill 32 33 34 35 As a result of the hearings a health warning was added to the pill the first informational insert for any prescription drug 36 Robert Finch Secretary of HEW praised Seaman saying The Doctors Case Against the Pill was a major factor in our strengthening the language in the final warning published in the Federal Register to be included in each package of the Pill The Jane Collective edit Main article Jane Collective Officially known as the Abortion Counseling Service of Women s Liberation the Jane Collective or Jane was an underground service in Chicago Illinois affiliated with the Chicago Women s Liberation Union that operated from 1969 to 1973 when abortion was illegal in the United States 37 The collective was started by activists in the women s liberation movement in an effort to address the increasing number of unsafe abortions being performed by untrained providers Since illegal abortions were not only dangerous but very expensive the founding members of the collective believed that they could provide women with safer and more affordable access to abortions The collective originated in 1969 with University of Chicago student Heather Booth who helped her friend s sister find an abortion provider 38 The founders of Jane initially focused their attention on providing women access to competent physicians willing to provide abortion services They found a physician they called Mike who was willing to work with them After creating a close relationship with Mike they found out that he actually wasn t really a physician and some Jane activists have characterized him as a con man However many of the techniques he used were safe and effective 37 The women of Jane then decided to cut out the middleman and perform the abortions themselves Mike taught the women how to perform dilation and curettage abortions and from then on the women performed them themselves During the years which Jane operated the collective performed more than 11 000 abortions 39 They disbanded after Roe v Wade made abortion legal throughout the United States in 1973 I m not anti doctor that would only help set back attitudes on modern medical technology Women instead have to demystify doctors by learning more about their own bodies and can then ask questions about gynecological examinations which have never been discussed thoroughly by doctors and their patients Ellen Frankfort on her book Vaginal Politics as quoted in The Crimson in 1972 40 Our Bodies Ourselves edit Main article Our Bodies Ourselves In 1969 at Emmanuel College in Boston Massachusetts at one of the first conference s for women s liberation Nancy Miriam Hawley organized a workshop called Women and Their Bodies Twelve white middle class women between the ages of 23 and 39 attended the workshop which allowed the women to discuss health The discussion created a consciousness raising environment the strong discussion supplied the women with the necessary tools and ideas that led to the attendees organizing as the doctors group to research about women and healthcare We weren t encouraged to ask questions but to depend on the so called experts Hawley told Women s eNews Not having a say in our own health care frustrated and angered us We didn t have the information we needed so we decided to find it on our own 41 As a result of this goal they spent the summer researching topics they were interested in and began teaching a course titled after the workshop based on what they had learned and written about It contained sections on abortion pregnancy postpartum depression sexuality anatomy and physiology sexually transmitted diseases and critiques of patriarchy capitalism and the healthcare system The book also contained information intended to guide women on how to maneuver the American health care system with subsections called The Power and Role of Male Doctors The Profit Motive in Health Care Women as Health Care Workers and Hospitals 42 They put their knowledge into an accessible format that served as a model for women who wanted to learn about themselves communicate with doctors and challenge the medical establishment to change and improve the health of women everywhere They used rhetoric that avoided describing the female reproductive system as passive unproductive helpless or powerless unlike any doctor or book at the time Their writing was so sought after that they started selling their research as a 35 cent 136 page booklet called Women and Their Bodies published in 1970 by the New England Free Press By 1973 350 000 copies of the retitled Our Bodies Ourselves had been sold without any formal advertising 41 As a result of their success the women formed the non profit Boston Women s Health Book Collective which now goes by the name Our Bodies Ourselves and published the first 276 page Our Bodies Ourselves in 1973 The collective published it with the major publisher Simon amp Schuster only on the condition that they would have complete editorial control and that nonprofit health centers could purchase copies at a significant discount 42 It featured first person stories from women and tackled many topics then regarded as taboo nbsp A plastic speculum Self help gynecology edit See also Carol Downer Lorraine Rothman and Menstrual extractionCarol Downer joined a NOW chapter in California in 1969 where she learned about abortions and in 1970 helped refer women to Harvey Karman s illegal abortion clinic 43 The Karman cannula was of particular interest to Downer as it did not require cervical dilation curettage or powerful vacuum suction Karman let them observe several abortions and an IUD insertion during which Downer saw a woman s cervix for the first time and was amazed 44 at how close and accessible it was This inspired her interest in performing abortions and to take a speculum home to perform a cervical examination on herself She and other women became interested in starting their own clinic after growing displeased with the male abortion providers behavior towards women On April 7 1971 a group of women including Downer interested in starting their own abortion clinic met at Everywoman s Bookstore in Venice California 43 Downer showed them what Karman used to perform abortions but the women were afraid and she knew that until she demystified this for them they were going to keep on thinking that abortion was this thing that you mostly would die of 44 Downer then laid down on a table in the room and performed her own cervical examination in front of all the women who were initially surprised but then crowded around her observing her cervix A few women wanted to see their own cervix s as well so they did self exams on the table after Downer 44 Lorraine Rothman also attended the meeting at the bookstore and she found Karman s device promising but unsafe She designed a new type of manual vacuum aspiration device which she patented as the Del Em and called the process menstrual extraction ME 43 ME made its debut at the National Organization for Women conference in Santa Monica California in August 1971 To Rothman and Downer s dismay the organizers of the conference were so appalled that they refused to give the women exhibit space 45 Instead Downer and Rothman hung flyers around the conference announcing a demonstration in their hotel room The attendees were given a plastic speculum to begin their education From the extensive mailing list collected during these demonstrations Downer and Rothman began a national tour going to 23 cities in the United States to teach women the new technique 46 47 48 This effectively began the movement of women s health self help groups clinics 49 1974 1980 editNational Women s Health Network edit In 1974 Belita Cowan Barbara Seaman Phyllis Chesler Mary Howell and Alice Wolfson established the National Women s Health Network Rose Kushner s critique of radical mastectomies edit nbsp A drawing of a radical mastectomy during which muscle lymph nodes and the entire breast is removed After being diagnosed with breast cancer Rose Kushner objected to the treatment which was then standard in which a tumor biopsy and radical mastectomy which involves removing muscle tissue and lymph nodes along with the breast were performed in a single surgical operation while the patient was under anesthesia She had difficulty finding a doctor who would perform a diagnostic biopsy and allow her to decide what action to take next 50 51 In order to have a less invasive procedure she had found Dr Thomas Dao who was willing to do a modified radical mastectomy 52 50 53 nbsp A drawing of a simple mastectomy during which only breast tissue is removed As Kushner recovered from her surgery she started writing about her experiences with breast cancer She traveled to Europe to learn about breast cancer treatment there finding that the radical mastectomy was not used as widely as in the United States Upon her return home she published Why Me in 1975 under the title Breast Cancer A Personal History and Investigative Report which contained extensive medical information and advice for patients including strong criticism of radical mastectomies and the practice of performing a biopsy and a mastectomy as a one step surgical procedure Her critique of prevalent breast cancer treatment included strong feminist themes such No man is going to make another impotent while he s asleep without his permission but there s no hesitation if it s a woman s breast 53 The book was strongly endorsed by Dr Dao but it was widely criticized by other doctors and the American Cancer Society 53 Kusher became a relentless critic of the treatment of breast cancer by the medical profession She attended numerous meetings of medical professionals interrupting presentations questioning conclusions and speaking against the prevalent practices of one step breast cancer surgery and radical mastectomy 53 In 1975 she was booed off the stage at a meeting of the Society of Surgical Oncology whose members objected to her challenges to traditional treatments 50 In 1975 Kushner and Dorothy Johnston established a telephone hotline called the Breast Cancer Advisory Center based in Kensington Maryland that operated until 1982 responding to calls and letters from thousands of women wanting information about breast cancer and its treatment 52 53 The center s establishment was motivated in part by Kushner s desire to promote patient self help and mutual support thus displacing the medical profession and the American Cancer Society from their roles as information gatekeepers 54 In spite of her unpopularity with the mainstream medical profession Kushner s work was well received in the public and won increasing respect in official circles In June 1977 she was the only lay member appointed to a ten member National Institutes of Health NIH panel that evaluated treatment options for primary breast cancer In 1979 the panel issued its findings concluding that the Halsted radical mastectomy should no longer be the standard treatment for suspected cases of breast cancer instead recommending total simple mastectomy as the primary surgical treatment 55 53 Additionally Kushner convinced her fellow panel members to include a statement calling for an end to the one step surgical procedure 56 At the time of her death Dr Bruce A Chabner of the National Cancer Institute said she was probably the single most important person in ending the practice of one step surgery for breast cancer because of her persistence and because she brought medical information to a wide public audience that otherwise might have remained unaware of the options 50 Challenging sexism in medicineSee also Sexism in medicine Gender bias in medical diagnosis and Women in medicine In medical schools edit Two laws in the United States lifted restrictions for women in the medical field Title IX of the Higher Education Act Amendments of 1972 and the Public Health Service Act of 1975 banning discrimination on grounds of gender In November 1970 the Assembly of the Association of American Medical Colleges rallied for equal rights in the medical field 57 The 1970s marked a great increase of women entering and graduating from medical school in the United States From 1930 to 1970 a period of 40 years about 14 000 women graduated from medical school From 1970 to 1980 a period of 10 years over 20 000 women graduated from medical school 57 This increase of women in the medical field was due to both political and cultural changes One study surveyed physician mothers and their physician daughters in order to analyze the effect that discrimination and harassment have on the individual and their career This study included 84 of physician mothers that graduated medical school prior to 1970 with the majority of these physicians graduating in the 1950s and 1960s The authors of this study stated that discrimination in the medical field persisted after the title VII discrimination legislation was passed in 1965 58 According to this study one third of physician daughters reported experiencing a form of gender discrimination in medical school field training and the work environment This study also stated that both generations equally experienced gender discrimination within their work environments This article provided an overview on the history of gender discrimination claiming that gender initiated the systematic exclusion of women from medical schools This was the case until 1970 when the National Organization for Women NOW filed a class action lawsuit against all medical schools in the United States More specifically this lawsuit was successful in forcing medical schools to comply to the civil rights legislation This success was seen by 1975 when the number of women in medicine had nearly tripled and continued to grow as the years progressed By 2005 over 25 of physicians and around 50 of medical school students were women The increase of women in medicine also came with an increase of women identifying as a racial ethnic minority yet this population is still largely underrepresented in comparison to the general population of the medical field 58 Within this specific study 22 of physician mothers and 24 of physician daughters identified themselves as being an ethnic minority These women reported experiencing instances of exclusion from career opportunities as a result of their race and gender Between doctors and female patients edit A sharp increase of women in the medical field led to developments in doctor patient relationships changes in terminology and theory With higher numbers of women enrolled in medical school medical practices like gynecology were challenged and changed One area of medical practice that was challenged and changed was gynecology Wendy Kline discusses the blurring of the medical and sexual that occurred in the medical field in the late 40s into the 60s particularly in gynecology Kline says that to ensure that young brides were ready for the wedding night they doctors used the pelvic exam as a form of sex instruction 59 In Ellen Frankfort s book Vaginal Politics Frankfort talks about the shame and humiliation felt during a pap test I was naked he was dressed I was lying down he was standing up I was quiet he was giving orders 60 One medical student is quoted in Kline s book as saying Since I experienced my own exams as a humiliating procedure I feared inflicting the same humiliation on another person 59 In 1972 the University of Iowa Medical School instituted a new training program for pelvic and breast examinations Students would act both as the doctor and the patient allowing each student to understand the procedure and create a more gentle respectful examination This method was quite different from the previous practice in which doctors were taught to assert their power over patients With changes in ideologies and practices throughout the 70s by 1980 over 75 schools had adopted this new method 61 Legacy editTanfer Emin Tunc argues that the Army of Three the Jane collective and Downer and Rothman s menstrual extraction technique have contributed to abortion technology in America 62 Timeline edit1968 1969 The Jane Collective begins referring women to illegal abortion providers 1970 January Congress meets for the Nelson Pill Hearings 1971 April 7th Carol Downer performs a cervical self examination in front of a group of women effectively starting the movement of women s health self help groups clinics 49 1972 September Carol Downer and Colleen Wilson are arrested for practicing medicine without a license after helping to insert yogurt into another woman s vagina 49 1973 January 22nd Roe v Wade liberalizes abortion laws The Jane Collective disbands Our Bodies Ourselves is published by mainstream publisher Simon amp Schuster 1974 The National Women s Health Network is created 1975 Rose Kushner publishes Why Me raising awareness about the overuse of radical mastectomies in breast cancer treatments 1976 1977 The Hyde Amendment is enacted barring the use of federal funds to pay for abortion except to save the life of the woman or if the pregnancy arises from incest or rape 1978 The Pregnancy Discrimination Act is enacted 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 Society for the Advancement of Women s Health Research Now Society for Women s Health Research is created by Dr Florence Pat Haseltine in 1990 1991 US Department of Health and Human Services Office on Women s Health is created April 19th Dr Bernadine Healy the first woman appointed as director of the National Institutes of Health announces the Women s Health Initiative 1992 Journal of Women s Health is established 1993 February 5th Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 is enacted September 13th the Violence Against Women Act is enacted 1994 The Mammography Quality Standards Act is enacted Media editList of associated media edit Periodicals edit The Monthly Extract Lolly and Jeanne Hirsch 1974 1978 Health Right Women s Health Forum 1975 Women and Health SUNY at Old Westbury 1976 The Newsalert National Women s Health Network 1976 Books edit Chesler Phyllis 1972 Women and Madness New York Avon Books Frankfort Ellen Vaginal Politics Haire Doris 1972 The Cultural Warping of Childbirth Icea News Seattle International Childbirth Education Association 11 1 5 35 PMID 12261812 Seaman Barbara 1972 Free and Female Greenwich Fawcett Crest Boston Women s Health Book Collective 1973 Our Bodies Ourselves Simon amp Schuster Ehrenreich Barbara English Deirdre 1973 Complaints and Disorders The Sexual Politics of Sickness A New View of a Woman s Body Federation of Feminist Women s Health Centers How to Stay Out of the Gynecologists Office Federation of Feminist Women s Health Centers Rich Adrienne 1976 Of Woman Born New York W W Norton and Co Dreifus Claudia ed 1977 Seizing Our Bodies The Politics of Women s Health New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0394723600 Kushner Rose 1977 Why Me What Every Woman Should Know About Breast Cancer To Save Her Life New York New American Library ISBN 9780451076922 Walsh Mary Roth 1977 Doctors Wanted No Women Need Apply Sexual barriers in the medical profession 1835 1975 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press Ehrenreich Barbara English Deirdre 1978 For Her Own Good Two Centuries of the Experts Advice to Women Ehrenreich John ed 1978 The Cultural Crisis of Modern Medicine New York Monthly Review Press Kushner Rose 1985 Alternatives New Developments in the War Against Breast Cancer Warner Books ISBN 0446345873 ISBN 978 0 446 34587 3 ISBN 0 446 34587 3 Downer Carol Chalker Rebecca 1992 A Woman s Book of Choices Four Walls Eight Windows Essays articles and pamphlets edit Koedt Anne 1970 The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm PDF Somerville Massachusetts New England Free Press OCLC 2393445 Weisstein Naomi 1971 Psychology Constructs the Female PDF Somerville Massachusetts New England Free Press Ehrenreich Barbara English Deirdre 1972 Witches Midwives and Nurses A History of Women Healers PDF Somerville Massachusetts New England Free Press Dodson Betty 1972 Liberating Masturbation PDF Union New Jersey Sensory Research Corp Kushner Rose 1984 Is Aggressive Adjuvant Chemotherapy the Halsted Radical of the 80s CA Cancer J Clin 1984 34 345 351 doi 10 3322 canjclin 34 6 345Documentaries edit La Operacion No Going Back A Pro Choice Perspective Documentary Produced by Carol Downer directed by Irene Schonwit written by Regina Leeds 1988 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint others in cite AV media notes link Video which presents menstrual extraction as an abortion method that can be used by women in self help health groups Notable people editNotable activists edit Charon Asetoyer Byllye Avery Heather Booth Phyllis Chesler Belita Cowan Carol Downer Laura Eldridge Merle Hoffman Mary Howell Rose Kushner Loretta Ross Barbara Seaman Lorraine Rothman Naomi Weisstein Alice WolfsonReferences editFootnotes edit Morgen 2002 p 149 a b Morgen 2002 p 121 a b c Marieskind Helen 1975 The Women s Health Movement International Journal of Health Services 5 2 217 223 doi 10 2190 5xun vx3h kmwm f17m ISSN 0020 7314 PMID 1102467 S2CID 6198144 Goldner Melinda 2017 Women s Health Social Movements In McCammon Holly J Taylor Verta Reger Jo Einwohner Rachel L eds The Oxford Handbook of U S Women s Social Movement Activism Vol 1 Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190204204 013 14 Silliman Jael 1997 Making the Connections Women s Health and Environmental Justice Race Gender amp Class Environmentalism and Race Gender Class Issues 5 1 104 129 JSTOR 41674851 Nelson Jennifer 2015 More than medicine a history of the feminist women s health movement New York New York University Press ISBN 9780814762776 OCLC 883881426 a b c Wiegers Mary 22 March 1970 Women s Liberation What Is It All About The Austin American Statesman Austin Texas p 50 Retrieved 20 April 2018 via Newspapers com a b Involvement Is Key To Pat s Liberation The Dayton Daily News Dayton Ohio 26 October 1969 p 11 Retrieved 20 April 2018 via Newspapers com Thompson Becky Summer 2002 Multiracial Feminism Recasting the Chronology of Second Wave Feminism PDF Feminist Studies 28 2 337 360 doi 10 2307 3178747 ISSN 0046 3663 JSTOR 3178747 Archived from the original PDF on 21 April 2018 Retrieved 21 April 2018 Foley Eileen 29 January 1971 The Many Facets of Women s Lib The Detroit Free Press Detroit Michigan p 22 Retrieved 20 April 2018 via Newspapers com Bennett Lorraine M 5 April 1970 How Far Yet to Go Baby The Atlanta Constitution Atlanta Georgia p 40 Retrieved 20 April 2018 via Newspapers com Kline 2010 p 13 Ruzek 1978 Seaman amp Eldridge 2012 p 2 Fahs Breanne 2016 Women s Health Movement in the United States The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies pp 1 4 doi 10 1002 9781118663219 wbegss119 ISBN 9781405196949 Boles Janet K Hoeveler Diane Long 1996 Historical Dictionary of Feminism Lanham Md Scarecrow Press pp 300 ISBN 978 0810830424 OCLC 32545162 Davis Nanette J 1985 From crime to choice the transformation of abortion in America Westport Conn Greenwood Press pp 33 ISBN 978 0313249297 OCLC 11970627 Reverby Susan M 2002 Feminism amp Health Health and History 4 1 5 19 doi 10 2307 40111418 JSTOR 40111418 Ruzek 1978 p 65 Morgen 2002 p 8 11 Baehr 1990 p 4 5 Sanger Margaret 1938 Margaret Sanger An Autobiography W W Norton p 287 a b Society for Humane Abortion Records of the Society for Humane Abortion 1962 1979 inclusive 1963 1975 bulk A Finding Aid oasis lib harvard edu Retrieved 2016 03 07 a b When Abortion Was a Crime publishing cdlib org Retrieved 2016 03 07 Brown Lori A 2016 05 13 Contested Spaces Abortion Clinics Women s Shelters and Hospitals Politicizing the Female Body Routledge ISBN 9781317160328 a b Veurink M Koster M Berg LT June 2005 The history of DES lessons to be learned Pharm World Sci 27 3 139 43 doi 10 1007 s11096 005 3663 z PMID 16096877 S2CID 12630813 Holmes H B Hoskins B B Gross M 1981 Birth Control and Controlling Birth Women Centered Perspectives Contemporary Issues in Biomedicine Ethics and Society Humana Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 89603 022 0 Retrieved January 13 2018 Morgen 2002 p 10 Prescott H M 2011 The Morning After A History of Emergency Contraception in the United States Critical Issues in Health and Medicine Rutgers University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 8135 5217 0 Retrieved January 13 2018 Dutton D B Preston T A Pfund N E 1992 Worse Than the Disease Pitfalls of Medical Progress Pitfalls of Medical Progress Cambridge University Press p 324 ISBN 978 0 521 39557 1 Retrieved January 13 2018 Seaman Barbara 2009 Health Activism American Feminist Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved 2019 02 27 Senate Hearings on the Pill PBS Retrieved 2019 01 23 L Fiona 2012 How Far We Haven t Come Remembering the Nelson Pill Hearings Women s Media Center Women s Media Center Retrieved 2019 01 23 How the Pill Gave Birth to the Women s Health Movement Society for Menstrual Cycle Research 2010 05 25 Retrieved 2019 01 23 The Pill Kills Women s Health and Feminist Activism Nursing Clio 2017 04 27 Retrieved 2019 01 23 Barbara Seaman Jewish Women s Archive jwa org Retrieved 2019 01 23 a b Jane Documents from Chicago s Clandestine Abortion Service 1968 1973 Pamphlet Baltimore MD Firestarter Press 2004 Retrieved from Interference Archive Pamphlets Baumgardner Jennifer 2008 Abortion amp Life New York Akashic Books p 24 ISBN 978 1 933354 59 0 Bart Pauline B 2002 Historical and Multicultural Encyclopedia of Women s Reproductive Rights in the United States Westport CT u a Greenwood Press pp 119 121 ISBN 978 0 313 30644 0 Frankfort Describes Vaginal Politics The Crimson 2 December 1972 a b Ginty Molly M May 4 2004 Our Bodies Ourselves Turns 35 Today Women s eNews Archived from the original on September 3 2009 Retrieved August 26 2012 a b Schneir Miriam Boston Women s Health Book Collective Feminism in Our Time The Essential Writings World War II to the Present New York Vintage 1994 352 Print a b c Baehr 1990 p 21 23 a b c Dudley Shotwell Hannah Grace 2016 Empowering the body the evolution of self help in the women s health movement University of North Carolina at Greensboro pp 23 27 OCLC 979987332 Woo Elaine October 3 2007 Lorraine Rothman 75 feminist clinic s co founder helped demystify gynecology Obituaries Los Angeles Times Chalker Rebecca Downer Carol 1992 A Woman s Book of Choices Abortion Menstrual Extraction RU 486 New York Four Walls Eight Windows ISBN 978 0941423861 Davis Flora 1991 Moving the Mountain The Women s Movement in America since 1960 New York Simon Schuster p 233 ISBN 9780671792923 Morgen 2002 p 8 a b c Morgen 2002 p 22 24 a b c d Gina Kolata Rose Kushner 60 Leader in Breast Cancer Fight The New York Times January 10 1990 Barron H Lerner 2001 No shrinking violet Rose Kushner and the rise of American breast cancer activism The Western Journal of Medicine 174 5 362 365 May 2001 a b Judith Rosenbaum Rose Kushner Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia 1 March 2009 Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved October 5 2009 a b c d e f Barron H Lerner 2003 The breast cancer wars hope fear and the pursuit of a cure in twentieth century America Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 516106 8 ISBN 978 0 19 516106 9 Anne S Kasper and Susan J Ferguson 2001 Breast Cancer Society Shapes an Epidemic Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 29451 4 ISBN 978 0 312 29451 9 page 327 Kushner Rose Papers 1953 1990 Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America Radcliffe College July 1999 Lerner Barron H May 2001 No shrinking violet Rose Kushner and the rise of American breast cancer activism West J Med 174 5 362 365 doi 10 1136 ewjm 174 5 362 PMC 1071404 PMID 11342526 a b Restructuring 1990 p 236 a b Shrier Diane K Zucker Alyssa N Mercurio Andrea E Landry Laura J Rich Michael Shrier Lydia A 2007 Generation to Generation Discrimination and Harassment Experiences of Physician Mothers and Their Physician Daughters Journal of Women s Health 16 6 1 13 doi 10 1089 jwh 2006 0127 a b Kline 2010 p 44 Frankfort Ellen 1970 Vaginal Politics New York Vintage p 60 as quoted in Kline 2010 p 43 Restructuring 1990 p 241 Tunc Tanfer Emin August 2007 Innovators and instigators Feminist contributions to American abortion technology 1963 1973 PDF Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care 33 3 149 54 doi 10 1783 147118907781004723 PMID 17609070 S2CID 30017608 Sources edit Baehr Ninia 1990 Abortion Without Apology A Radical History for the 1990s Boston South End Press ISBN 978 0896083844 Kline Wendy 2010 10 15 Bodies of Knowledge Sexuality Reproduction and Women s Health in the Second Wave University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226443089 Morgen Sandra 2002 Into Our Own Hands The Women s Health Movement in the United States 1969 1990 New Brunswick N J Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0813530703 OCLC 48077521 Ruzek Sheryl Burt 1978 The women s health movement feminist alternatives to medical control New York Praeger ISBN 978 0030414367 OCLC 4056590 Paludi Michele A Streuernage Gertrude A eds 1990 Foundations for a Feminist Restructuring of the Academic Disciplines New York Harrington Park Press Seaman Barbara Eldridge Laura eds 2012 Voices of the Women s Health Movement volume 1 New York Seven Stories Press ISBN 9781609804442 OCLC 610144564 Further reading editDavis Flora 1991 The Women s Health Movement Moving the Mountain The Women s Movement in American since 1960 Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0671602079 Fahs Breanne 2015 The Body in Revolt The Impact and Legacy of Second Wave Corporeal Embodiment Journal of Social Issues 71 2 386 401 doi 10 1111 josi 12117 Hart Evan 2007 Building a More Inclusive Women s Health Movement Byllye Avery and the Development of the National Black Women s Health Project 1981 1990 Graduate thesis University of Cincinnati Heide Wilma Scott 1978 Feminism Making a Difference in Our Health The Woman Patient Springer US pp 9 19 doi 10 1007 978 1 4615 8840 5 2 ISBN 9781461588429 Nilsson Jeff Warren Maude Radford January 14 2016 The Fight for Women Doctors Saturday Evening Post Retrieved 2019 01 25 Patterson Elizabeth C 2017 02 06 Doctors Wanted No Women Need Apply and The Hidden Malpractice American Scientist Retrieved 2019 02 26 The Women s Health Movement Click The Ongoing Feminist Revolution Clio Visualizing History 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women 27s health movement in the United States amp oldid 1179340430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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