Women as Medics
In the medical community, respecting a patients social and religious concerns are of utmost importance. To be more specific, a study highlighting Muslim patients and cross-gender interactions in medicine reveals that Muslim women prefer to be treated by female doctors due to personal and cultural reasons such as modesty and avoiding physical contact between the sexes. Often, the wishes of female Muslim patients aren’t met due to the shortage of female doctors around the world, and specifically in the United States. I am committed to solving this problem by creating an online platform where young women from around the world can learn more about the field of medicine and can converse with each other on imperative medical issues, potentially finding a calling for themselves in medicine.
Islam is one of the fastest growing religions in the world with almost 3.5 million followers in the United States. As physicians encounter diverse patient populations with different religious practices as well as cultural values, they have to adapt their patient relations. In Islam, due to modesty standards, many women prefer to be treated by a female physician. However, in the United States alone, 70% of Muslim doctors are men. These barriers for Muslim female patients may cause delays in the medical care they need. In a study detailed in the Journal of Women’s Health, 250 Muslim women were surveyed and fifty-three percent expressed delays in medical care seeking due to a lack of female clinicians. Modesty concerns continue to serve as barriers to adequate care for female patients. In a study detailing cancer beliefs, twenty-five percent of Arab women surveyed emphasized being uncomfortable during clinical breast exams. Preference for female obstetrical providers often prove to be obstacles in providing competent reproductive healthcare to treat Muslim women. Hence, it is imperative that more young women pursue a career in the field of medicine to aid in solving this disparity.
Women as Medics is an interactive platform for young women to participate in monthly global chats; through which Muslim girls from all over the world come together and discuss a specific topic for that month. The topics can be agreed upon by everyone in the discussion forum beforehand. Through a Harkness-type approach, girls will feel free to share their thoughts with minimal judgement or prejudice. Topics specific to communities around the world will be welcome and solutions addressed. Girls can have a chance to share their interests and potential research projects to be seen by all; this will inspire more girls to embark on their own journey to solving problems in their community. At the beginning of every month, a topic is chosen and a specific week is designated to introduce the topic and its background. For the next three weeks, girls can discuss specifics about the topic such as what particular groups are most affected, how the problem is growing or how it is being solved. Women as Medics is an interactive home away from home where young women come together in a comfortable setting to inspire each other to be the solutions for their communities and the world.
Women as Medics serves Muslim women of all ages, now and in the future, who are more comfortable with a woman doctor-- we gear their wishes and begin to create a setting where teenage girls can dream and plan to be doctors. We serve the potential aspirations of young girls around world who wish to be a doctor but won’t know where to begin to make their dreams real. Early on, girls begin their primary education on the same footing as their male counterparts, yet gender disparity begins to escalate later on as they go on to pursue professional education. To this extent, it has been reported that 70% of American Muslim doctors are men. The voices and dreams of girls will be protected and nurtured in Women as Medics, allowing for profound and emergent discussions addressing critical health problems. Also many girls are subject to inadequate care due to cross-gender restrictions in their communities. Girls will be engaged in meaningful discussions, sharing their adversities, and inspiring each other to learn more about medicine. Through the cultivation of a new generation of female doctors, the needs of nearly half of the world’s Muslim population will be met.
- Increase the number of girls and young women participating in formal and informal learning and training
The lack of women doctors continues to persist because girls are not continuing their education. We aim to increase the participation of girls in formal education by preparing them to have the inner confidence and the joy to learn so that they choose medicine when the time comes. By providing a bridge for women to inspire them to continue their education, they can tackle problems that effect their community in specific such as nanotechnology or artificial grafting. Women as Medics will make sure that nobody falls of the bridge that could lead them to pursue medicine in the future.
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