Prescribing Information: Elizabeth B. Connell, the Pill, and the (Woman) Patient's Peace of Mind

被引:0
作者
Wei, Jiemin Tina [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Oral Contraceptive Pill (OCP); Informed Consent; Nocebo Effect; Conflict of Interest; Iatrogenesis; Women's Health Feminists; MEDICINE; HEALTH; PLACEBO;
D O I
10.1093/jhmas/jrae032
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, commercialized reproductive technologies experienced a reputational crisis as news about the hormonal birth control pill's possible side effects reportedly caused 18-30% of women to stop taking it. While secondary literature has followed patients' and legislatures' actions, few histories have focused on physicians' responses. How did physicians manage this public crisis of confidence? This article contributes to existing literature through a backstage look at the work of Elizabeth B. Connell (1925-2018), whose wide-ranging career in medicine, academia, government, industry consulting, and popular writing embroiled her at the center of these controversies. To counter critique from legislatures and consumer reformers, Connell became a mediator for medicine in the public sphere, dispensing select information and arguing for limits on others - for the patient's sake. If legislative inquiry's primary havoc was unleashing information, Connell would help the profession moderate it. Because Connell was a woman doctor whom health feminists who were her contemporaries denied was a feminist doctor, the existing scholarship has occluded her. This article reconstructs the contributions of this important and flawed doctor, illuminating how she contorted herself to suit her various public messages, constrained by her conflicting, dual identities as woman and doctor.
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页数:22
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