Literature DB >> 31483027

Gender Equity in Healthcare: An Issue of Justice or Need?

Viviana Guzzo Lemke1,2.   

Abstract

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31483027      PMCID: PMC6777881          DOI: 10.5935/abc.20190168

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol        ISSN: 0066-782X            Impact factor:   2.000


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With great interest on the topic, we read the article “The Profile of the Brazilian Cardiologist - A Sample of the Members of the Brazilian Society of Cardiology”, by Faganello et al.,[1] where the professional and personal characteristics of Brazilian cardiologists are reported. The significant gender differences were highlighted in the mini-editorial “Profile of Brazilian Cardiologists: A look on Female Leadership in Cardiology and Stress - Challenges for the Next Decade” by Mesquita et al.,[2] where peculiarities such as payment and the small number of women in Cardiology are analyzed according to an intriguing point of view. These articles resonate with the “Women’s Letter” by Oliveira et al.,[3] a document based on current objectives, which require long-term efforts and structural changes in the medical culture, especially regarding the participation of women in executive positions in medical specialty societies and healthcare-related government bodies. The important study “Medical demographics in Brazil 2018” by Scheffer et al.,[4] reports a reality which is already known by cardiologists: despite the fact that women currently represent the majority of students at Medical schools, indicating that doctors up to 34 years of age are mostly women, 70% of Cardiologists are men. This reality further contributes for the small number of women choosing Interventional Cardiology as their specialty. Acknowledging the need for a greater and more effective participation of women in Medicine and Science as a whole, the Brazilian Society of Hemodynamics and Interventional Cardiology has created the so called “Mulheres INTervencionistas - MINT (Women Interventionists), whose objective is to pursue gender equality at a professional and patient level, encouraging female doctors to choose Interventional Cardiology as their specialty, thus helping improve the odds to have equal career opportunities as men, in addition to increasing the awareness of the interventional and research community about gender-related disparities in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with cardiovascular diseases, supporting the routine participation of women in clinical trials to guarantee women are present in all aspects of scientific literature, be it in clinical trials, guidelines or regulatory processes. Finally, going back to the remark made by the mini-editorial, sexism cannot bel et aside in the analysis as one for the factors that discourage women to take up medical careers. Struggling for equal conditions and payment must be more than an objective, since, as reported in the important Lancet editorial in February 2019, “Feminism is for everybody”, gender equality is not only a matter of justice and rights, it is essential to produce better research and provide better patient care. It is the duty of medical societies to head this change of paradigma for opportunities to be akin to all, adding forces so that the well known female characteristic, caring for others, may benefit all of our patients.
  4 in total

1.  Feminism is for everybody.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2019-02-09       Impact factor: 79.321

2.  Profile of Brazilian Cardiologists: An Overview of Female Leadership in Cardiology and Stress - Challenges for the Next Decade.

Authors:  Evandro Tinoco Mesquita; Eduardo Thadeu de Oliveira Correia; Letícia Mara Dos Santos Barbetta
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2019-08-08       Impact factor: 2.000

3.  Brazilian Society of Cardiology - The Women's Letter.

Authors:  Glaucia Maria Moraes de Oliveira; Fátima Elizabeth Fonseca de Oliveira Negri; Nadine Oliveira Clausell; Maria da Consolação V Moreira; Olga Ferreira de Souza; Ariane Vieira Scarlatelli Macedo; Barbara Campos Abreu Marino; Carisi Anne Polanczyk; Carla Janice Baister Lantieri; Celi Marques-Santos; Cláudia Maria Vilas Freire; Deborah Christina Nercolini; Fatima Cristina Monteiro Pedroti; Imara Correia de Queiroz Barbosa; Magaly Arrais Dos Santos; Maria Cristiane Valeria Braga Braile; Maria Sanali Moura de Oliveira Paiva; Marianna Deway Andrade Dracoulakis; Narriane Chaves Holanda; Patricia Toscano Rocha Rolim; Roberta Tavares Barreto Teixeira; Sandra Mattos; Sheyla Cristina Tonheiro Ferro da Silva; Simone Cristina Soares Brandão; Viviana de Mello Guzzo Lemke; Marcelo Antônio Cartaxo Queiroga Lopes
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 2.000

4.  The Profile of the Brazilian Cardiologist - A Sample of Members of the Brazilian Society of Cardiology.

Authors:  Lucas Simonetto Faganello; Mauricio Pimentel; Carisi Anne Polanczyk; Tiago Zimerman; Marcus Vinicius Bolivar Malachias; Oscar Pereira Dutra; Leandro Ioschpe Zimerman
Journal:  Arq Bras Cardiol       Date:  2019-06-27       Impact factor: 2.000

  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  Prevalence, Causes, and Risk Factors of Visual Impairment in Emiratis and Non-Emiratis of Dubai: A Subnational Population-Based Cross-Sectional Survey.

Authors:  Manal O Taryam; M Mansur Rabiu; Shurooq AlBanna; Noora Al Shamsi; Bushra Albastaki; Hayat Khan; Salam Chettiankandi; Wafa Khamis Alnakhi; Hamid Y Hussain; Prasan Rao; Gurdeep Singh; Sivakami Pai; Mazen M Sinjab; Lama Toufik Sharbek; Xianwen Shang; Mingguang He
Journal:  J Ophthalmol       Date:  2022-04-30       Impact factor: 1.974

  1 in total

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