Abstract

The study of women in medicine draws upon the personal accounts and observations of women physicians and upon the analytic tools of the social sciences. Two notable 1977 contributions help define the field: Chaff, Haimbach, Fenichel, and Woodside's comprehensive annotated bibliography containing more than 4,000 citations and Walsh's scholarly feminist interpretation of the history of U.S. women in medicine. Newcomers to the field would still do well to begin with Lopate's overview, which covers literature until the mid-1960s.1 The purpose of this review is to examine what has been written since 1973 about the individual

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