Women as patients: A problem for sex differences research |
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Authors: | Kathy Davis |
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Affiliation: | Vrije Universiteit, Faculteit der Geneeskunde, Vakgroep Gedragswetenschappen, de Boelelaan 1087A, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | ![]() Using the feminist critique of the health care system as a starting point, this article indicates some of the relevant issues facing women as patients in general practice: lack of control over our bodies and reproductive functions, ‘psychologizing’ of women's complaints, the medicalization of social problems experienced by women as a group. Current research on women as patients is primarily of the sex-differences tradition, i.e. the differences between men and women patients are investigated. The results of this research are critically discussed. My contention is that such research, aside from being methodologically impoverished, is—from a feminist point of view—counterproductive. Some directions for alternative research in this area are given. |
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