Icône menu hamburger Icône loupe de recherche
  1. TDN >
  2. Société

Victime d’une étude sexiste, les femmes du secteur médical répliquent de la meilleure façon qui soit !

Publié par Elodie GD le 02 Août 2020 à 9:35
Partagez ce contenu sur Facebook
Partagez ce contenu sur Whatsapp
Partagez ce contenu sur Twitter
Partagez ce contenu par mail

11.

View this post on Instagram

Duas fotos, dois momentos diferentes e uma MESMA pessoa! Em dezembro de 2019, foi publicado o artigo "Prevalence of unprofessional social media content among young vascular surgeons" pelo Journal of Vascular Surgery, artigo dirigido por 6 homens e 1 mulher cujo objetivo foi a analise de redes sociais de 480 médicos e médicas da cirurgia vascular com objetivo de identificar comportamentos não profissionais e potencialmente "mal-vistos" por pacientes e chefes. Foram divididos em conteúdos claramente não profissionais e potencialmente não profissionais: "Conteúdo potencialmente não profissional inclui: segurar/consumir bebida alcoólica, vestuário inapropriado, palavrões, comentários controversos sobre política e religião e temas sociais controversos." Como forma de protesto contra o conteúdo conservador antigo, profissionais passaram a usar a hashtag #medbikini com fotos próprias em uso de biquínis (considerados impróprios para o perfil médico, assim como fantasias de halloween e as poses em que as mulheres apareciam nas fotos de biquíni, segundo o artigo). Estamos aqui para dizer que: sim, medicas usam biquínis. Sim, mulheres são cirurgiãs e ortopedistas. Não, minha religião não é ofensiva. Não, biquínis não são ofensivos, nosso corpo não é ofensivo. Não, não está tudo bem fazer piadas machistas. Não estamos mais na década de 60, e impróprio é esse tipo de pensamento ainda existir. Texto da @memecinainterna adaptado pela @marceladamm

A post shared by Marina Andrade (@marinaxandrade) on

A lire aussi: Voici les pires touristes au monde, et cela risque de vous énerver !

12.

View this post on Instagram

Subir fotos en bikini no interfiere con mis competencias o habilidades en tomar decisiones en mi práctica médica. Las mujeres de la ciencia de la salud son las más afectadas por discriminaciones de está naturaleza y por ello les digo : No hay mujer más hermosa que la que se dedica a salvar la vida de alguien más . Con bata y sin ella su intelecto brilla. Pues las mujeres que suben fotos en vestido de baño NO SON BRUTAS; vamos a acabar con ese estigma pendejo. Hoy te invito a subir una foto donde te muestres en tu vida social y en tu vida laboral… #medbikini porque no podemos permitir que juzguen las capacidades intelectuales y la ética profesional por el contenido informal de las redes sociales. 🩺👙 #medbikini

A post shared by Dan Espinosa 🍃 (@danespinosav) on

13.

View this post on Instagram

I’m a cardiologist standing in solidarity with female vascular surgeons today. NEWSFLASH: FEMALE DOCTORS CAN WEAR WHATEVER THEY WANT. ⁣ Female doctors, nurses, NPs/PAs, all healthcare professionals – we can wear a bikini, a dress, or we can wear scrubs. This does not change how good we are at being a healthcare provider. We can wear WHATEVER we want on our free time, and still save your life. Sexism in medicine is alive and well. But we won’t let that stop us. In this ridiculous article making its rounds on social media, the vascular surgery authors sought out to determine how many vascular surgeons had participated in what they state is “inappropriate social media behavior”, which they defined as photos in BIKINIS – BUT ?? NOT MEN IN BATHING SUITS.  Other topics considered “inappropriate” were Halloween costumes, GUN CONTROL and politics.  The “study” was written by 3 men who created fake social media accounts to spy on applicants. Is this a joke? Women in medicine: whether you’re a nurse, medical student, resident, an attending, post your favorite bikini pic/dress pic/halloween pic/anything today and tag me, hashtag #medbikini . We have to drown out the sexism in medicine and keep it moving. It’s 2020 people. Sexism is cancelled.*******UPDATE******* July 24th 6:54 pm EST — this study is OFFICIALLY RETRACTED!! 👏👏 see the statement from the journal in my stories

A post shared by Dr. Danielle Belardo, M.D. (@daniellebelardomd) on

14.

View this post on Instagram

Do not judge a book, or a professional woman by her cover. It is ridiculous to condemn a woman for having a woman’s body! Why should we hide any side of ourselves? Being a woman, with a woman’s figure, is no more offensive than being a man, with man’s body. Be proud of yourself and your accomplishments whether you are a Man or a Woman. It takes hard work to stay physically and mentally fit: it takes a commitment to eating healthy, exercising, sleeping and balancing stress. Sharing one’s healthy lifestyle or one’s femininity is not a sign of unprofessionalism. Judging a colleague for sharing herself as a human being is what is unprofessional. Unfortunately there continues to be sexism in medicine. When I was invited to interview to be the Team Optometrist for the Anaheim Ducks hockey team, male colleagues told me not to bother. They said I would not get the position because I am a woman. I am huge sports fan and athlete so I said I didn’t care and went for the interview anyways. I am grateful to the Ducks for choosing me, and making me the only female doctor in the NHL at the time. I served for five years until I co-founded a rehabilitative vision clinic at the Cedars Sinai Medical Center and couldn't make it down to Anaheim regularly. Sometimes I was refused access to the locker room, or told to go through the Decoy’s door (the Decoys are their cheerleaders). I would have to ask them to call the Ducks office to confirm that I was indeed one of the team doctors👩‍⚕‍, and not a Decoy. In the early days when there were far fewer women doctors, I was asked at many a conference if I am the daughter of the male doctor that I am with. One time a colleague said in front of me, "I can't believe how many women they are letting into optometry school. Women end up dropping out of the field once they have children which means we have to train even more doctors." WTF? He said this right to my face. Well I am a single working mom, and I've been in practice for 31 years! It’s a double standard. Women are both loved, yet hated for our bodies. We need to put an end to this sexism. I stand in solidarity with all women health care professionals. Please share your story.

A post shared by Dr. Elise Brisco Holistic Doc (@hollywoodeyes) on

15.

View this post on Instagram

Mesma pessoa. Mesma competência. Que é médica, mas antes é humana. Que usa biquini, frequenta praia, dorme e (no geral) vive, igual a qualquer outra pessoa.⠀ ⠀ “Inapropriado” é a gente estar discutindo isso em pleno 2020. Seguimos. 👊🏼🤷🏻‍♀️⠀ ⠀ #medbikini

A post shared by Gabrielly de Araujo (@dragabriellyaraujo) on

Votre article continue en Page 4. Cliquez sur « Page Suivante » pour découvrir plus de photos de femmes du personnel médical en maillot de bain