via Feminist Law Professors, who are working with the Women’s Media Center to raise awareness about what is at stake with the current health care bill over at NotUnderTheBus.com. Help spread the word by posting this on your blog, Facebook, or Twitter.
Yearly Archives: 2009
Health Care Reform: Where Are the Students?
Via Inside Higher Ed. This could be the theme of the keynote I’ve been invited to give at the American College Health Association meeting in Philadelphia this summer.
This subject certainly is of great interest to the students in my honors class this semester. Several of the final projects addressed health reform. More were against the public option than were for it, although perhaps if they had more information on how much health insurance would cost under the health bills now being considered by Congress, they might change their minds.
Another reason we need a feminist approach to breast cancer
via Well Blog – NYTimes.com. I agree with many of the comments on this one — TPP really is condescending towards anyone who challenges her point of view. I think there really is cause for concern about a drug that is not really that effective and causes a lot of serious side effects.
Feminist Law Professors has another commentary on the recent recommendations regarding breast cancer screenings. I didn’t have the same reaction to the NYT Op-Ed criticized in this post. I also was aware of an earlier report this year that the CSA Prostate Test Found to Save Few Lives. [in fact, I had heard this from GPs at a conference in Scotland in Fall 2008). Again, I find the most compelling points in the comments section, from Jay who had ductal cancer in situ (DCIS) and criticizes condescending treatment at her breast cancer treatment center. So, this is another example of why the “pink ribbon” industry is not feminist. It’s especially horrifying to me that so many women have healthy breasts and ovaries removed because they are so afraid of getting cancer.
20th anniversary of the massacre at L’Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal
via Historiann : History and sexual politics, 1492 to the present.
Did you know that December 6 is the National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women in Canada? Established in 1991 by the Parliament of Canada, this day marks the anniversary of the murders in 1989 of 14 young women at l’École Polytechnique de Montréal. They died because they were women.
Also, Anna a FWD/Forward asks us to remember girls and women with disabilities who have been murdered because of their disabilities.
Barbara Ehrenreich on why we need a new women’s health movement.
via Salon.com.
Nothing to add here — just thought I’d share it.
Women Behaving Badly: Cindy Sheehan at CCSU
via The New Britain Herald Unlike the troll in the comments section I don’t think her 15 minutes of fame has passed. If anything her message is more relevant than ever — it’s just harder to criticize the war because many anti-war protesters under President Bush were as much if not more anti-Bush as they were anti-war.
One major point that the Herald reporter doesn’t mention is one Sheehan made about the myth that U.S. and NATO forces are helping the women of Afghanistan. Nothing could be further from the truth. Afghan women find themselves fighting both the Taliban and the NATO forces. The latter is doing nothing to advance the cause of women — if they left, then women would only have to fight the Taliban. [for more, see this entry on Sheehan’s blog].
Thoughts on New Breast Cancer Screening Guidelines
I’ve been replying to a query about this on Hartford Courant columnist Susan Campbell’s blog, so am going to put some of my thoughts down here at Knitting Clio as well. Susan writes:
“Here are the new recommendations. Tell me I’m getting all conspiracy-theorist and I will at least half-listen, but we all know women whose breast cancer was first detected while those women were in their 40s.
And here’s a bit more on the topic.”
In my first reply I wrote: I ‘m not sure what to think. I recently reviewed a book by historian-physician Robert Aronowitz called Unnatural History: Breast Cancer and American Society which makes a convincing case that advances in screening and diagnosis have not delivered on their promise to improve cancer outcomes (I’ve heard similar arguments made about prostate cancer). In fact, the emphasis on yearly mammograms and self-exams is rooted in the medical profession’s view of the breast as a “precancerous organ.”
So, on a population level, the new recommendations about mammograms seem to make sense. On a personal level, though, who wants to get cancer?
Susan later replied, “I haven’t read that book, but have read about that book (not quite the same, is it) and I get that, I think. But why also discourage women from doing self-exams? I am starting to get all conspiracy theorist about this. I knew I would. I knew this was in my future, but I thought I could hold it together just a few more years. But here’s some information from an organization I respect: http://bcaction.org/index.php?page=mammography-and-new-tech”
My response:
re: the self-exam recommendation — it could be because pre-menopausal women tend to have denser breast tissue, detecting lumps through self-exams isn’t very effective.
Another way of thinking of this is to look at an earlier routine screening recommendation — annual x-rays to detect TB. It later turned out the test was worse than the disease.
Finally, breast cancer is not the most common form of cancer — skin cancer is. Yet there doesn’t seem to be a major industry dedicated to early screening and prevention. Also, the number one killer of women over age 50 is heart disease. Awareness and education about this is starting to catch up, but pales in comparison to the breast cancer industry.
Susan wrote: ” I really don’t want to sound like a crank here, but I know women who’ve had secondary cancers that doctors told them came from the treatment of their earlier breast cancer. There’s a feel of women as guinea pigs here. I know science is evolving, but Jaysus.”
To which I replied, You’re not a crank, Susan — and this isn’t the first time in history women are used for experimental medical treatments (e.g. DES)
In the midst of that exchange, Our Bodies Our Blog posted an entry, “New Mammogram Guidelines are Causing Confusion, But Here’s Why they Make Sense.” They observe that feminist health groups were ahead of the medical profession on this: “A number of women’s health organizations, including Our Bodies Ourselves, the National Women’s Health Network and Breast Cancer Action, for years have warned that regular mammograms do not necessarily decrease a women’s risk of death. Premenopausal women in particular are urged to consider the risks and benefits.
In fact, the NWHN issued a position paper in 1993 recommending against screening mammography for pre-menopausal women. It was a very controversial position at the time — even more so than now. The breast cancer advocacy movement was in its infancy and efforts were focused on getting Medicare and insurance companies to cover mammograms. What the NWHN found — and other groups have since concurred — is that the potential harm from screening can outweigh the benefits for premenopausal women.”
Further adding to the confusion is this week’s statement by Department of Health and Human Services Sec. Kathleen Sebelius who advised women and medical professionals to ignore government-issued recommendations.
Yesterday’s edition of “All Things Considered” had several interesting reports on this issue . The first story on “All Things Considered” interviewed my colleague at Columbia, Barron Lerner, author of Breast Cancer Wars: Hope, Fear, and the Pursuit of a Cure in Twentieth-Century America.
“If you think about finding a cancer in your breast using your fingers, especially one that’s deep in the breast, it’s got to be at least a centimeter in size, maybe even a little larger. We call that early detection, but it’s not early. Most of those cancers, many of those cancers have been there growing for months or years, and we now know, in contrast to when early detection was invented, that a lot of breast cancers spread early on in their course.
So the notion that finding a lump in your breast is truly early, and it’s before the cancer has spread, and therefore, you’re going to save a life doing that doesn’t make the sense that it used to. ”
Two other interesting stories: First, “Breast Cancer Advocates not Buying New Guidelines,” discusses the outcry against the new guidelines from breast cancer survivors and the Susan G. Komen foundation. The second story, “Mammogram Wars: Experts feel the Backlash,” features breast cancer surgeon Dr. Susan Love whose reaction was, “It’s about time!” [see Dr. Love’s blog for a longer version of this] The reactions on Dr. Love’s blog have ranged from “thank you for having the guts to say this” to “are you crazy?” The reply that best sums up my thoughts on the subject come from Cassie: “Sadly indvidual stories don’t constitute science. We already ration care in this country since 20% of all women of child bearing age lack health insurnace. This is as high as 39% for hispanic women so the 5 billion a year spent on unnecessary testing is forcing these women to receive rationed care.
I don’t support pitting one group against another and yes all life is priceless but grow up people. Tons and tons of medical care has nothing to do with outcomes or need. Only 8% of diabetics get the right care for example but there is no outcry to treat them properly.. BTW diabetes account for 35% of all medicare costs but are only 10% of the population. Focus on what works and not what has been marketing to us. Dr Love is ahead of the curve and I for one stand by her.”
Amen, sister! For more criticism of the “breast cancer industry” see Samantha King’s excellent book, Pink Ribbons, Inc: Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthrophy, as well as Barbara Ehrenreich’s personal account of breast cancer — unlike other survivors, Ehrenreich was not thrilled with the “princess treatment” given to cancer patients– she found it nauseating and infantilizing. She also finds nothing feminist in the sentimental “sisterhood” of breast cancer survivorship.
This is sadly true of the women’s health in general — true feminist voices are overshadowed by the corporate women’s health industry.
Added later: here’s a story from today’s New York Times, featuring another medical historian from Columbia, Sheila Rothman. To her comments I would add that the standard of care for breast cancer used to be radical mastectomy. It took a paradigm shift among surgeons forced by women’s activism to change that.
Breast Cancer Advocates Not Buying New Guidelines
Veterans Day Celebration: Where are the Women?
Earlier this week, my colleagues and I organized an event honoring women veterans at CCSU. Our headliner was VA Commissioner Linda Spoonster Schwartz, who started her career during the Vietnam war. At that time, the military only permitted 2% of active duty personnel to be female. So, Schwartz began her career as a contract nurse with no official military appointment. She had to ask her CO for permission to marry, and was honorably discharged when she became pregnant with her daughter. When Schwartz tried to join the Air Force reserves, she was told her pregnancy was a “disability” — but fortunately she was able to persuade the reserves to take her anyway. A few years later, the Schwartz was invited to debate Phyllis Schlafly about the issue of women in combat. This was at the height of Stop ERA in the early 1980s, and the big bugaboo was the possibility that women would get drafted. Schlafly asked Schwartz how she would feel if her daughter were drafted. Schwartz said that she would be proud to have her daughter serve if it came to that.
Dr. Sally Haskell from the women’s healthcare service at the Connecticut VA Hospital talked about how it wasn’t until the early 1990s that VA hospitals began to open women’s health centers to address the needs of female veterans. Even today, female veterans find that the VA is still designed primarily for men and are reluctant to go there. Helen Hart-Gai, APRN, talked about her work counseling veterans with PSTD, many of whom have been sexually assaulted. She said that female veterans report a higher rate of sexual assault than the general population, and that 54% of all women veterans say they have been sexually harassed. Hart-Gai also said that she counsels male sexual assault victims — not just from the current wars, but from WWII and the Korean and Vietnam Wars as well. These stories about sexual discrimination were confirmed by the two graduate students, Amy Otzel and Despina Mavroudis, who told their stories about serving in Iraq.
Attendance was sparse (disappointing — but understandable since it is the height of paper/exam frenzy) but the event was very informative and moving.
Our local paper, The New Britain Herald, ran stories on CCSU veterans and Veterans Day events on campus. I searched in vain for any reporting on our event, and, you guessed it, the coverage was all about teh menz. So, the Herald will be getting a letter from me and my colleagues in WGSS!
Knitting Clio is Mad as Hell at Publisher’s Weekly
via She Writes, who tells us that Publishers Weekly included ZERO female authors in its list of best books of 2009. The blog encourages us women writers to participate in SHE WRITES DAY OF ACTION. Here’s what they ask us to do, including my replies:
“By Friday, November 13th, please do three simple, but enormously powerful, things:
1) Post a blog on She Writes responding to the exclusion of women on PW’s list. Make your own list, as many of you have done already, or take this opportunity to reflect more broadly the ramifications of its women-cook-the-food-but-only-men-get-Michelin-stars message, and share your thoughts with us all. (More ideas on this to come.)”
Here is my contribution:
At my personal blog, Knitting Clio, I review the books I read with my book club. This year’s female authors and their books were:
A.S. Byatt, The Children’s Book
Gin Phillips, The Well and the Mine
Jennifer Scanlon, Bad Girls Go Everywhere
Lily Koppel, The Read Leather Diary
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Half a Yellow Sun
Joyce Carol Oates, Wild Nights
Kate Walbert, A Short History of Women
All of these were excellent books, and Adichie’s was the best of all of them. Need I add she also won a prestigious MacArthur Award (aka the “genius” award)?
My book club has also read just about everything by Geraldine Brooks, and even got to hear give a fabulous lecture at a local synagogue earlier this fall.
I should also mention books published by my colleagues:
Mary Collins, American Idle: A Journey Through Our Sedentary Culture.
Karen Ritzenhoff and Katherine Hermes, Sex and Sexuality in a Feminist World.
Briann Greenfield, Out of the Attic: Inventing Antiques in Twentieth-Century New England.
Leah Glaser, Electrifying the Rural American West: Stories of Power, People, and Place.
“2) Buy a book written by a woman in 2009. Take a photo of yourself holding it. Post its cover on your page. Tell us what book you bought, and why.”
I just bought Barbara Kingsolver’s The Lacuna because I love her work and can’t wait to read this latest novel.
“3) Invite five women writers you know to read your words and join us on She Writes.
Once you have posted your blog, send me the link at kamy@shewrites.com. We will send these links to entire community (5000+) on Saturday. We will send out a press release then too. If you are a well-known writer, you know how greatly we need your response, your leadership, and your help in spreading the word. If you aren’t, we greatly need your response and your leadership too. Use this platform as a platform of your own. What else is She Writes for?
Let’s make a statement that no one can ignore. Join us, BY FRIDAY, in our first-ever day of action, and we will do the rest. I’d like to see hundreds, if not thousands, of posts, and hundreds, if not thousands, of purchases. Vote with your voice and with your wallet. Push back. Make it good. Make it right.”