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Syllabi: Women's Health: Views from Literature, Communities, and Clinical Medicine
INSTITUTION: Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine
PRESENTER: Delese Wear, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Behavioral Sciences; Associate Director, Women and Medicine Program PROGRAM DIRECTOR: Martin Kohn, Ph.D., Director of the Human Values in Medicine Program (email: mfk@neoucom.EDU)
ENROLLMENT: BS/MD; selective; limit: 12 SEMESTER: Spring 2000 LEARNING GOALS: To study selected issues in women's health from interdisciplinary perspectives, and to appreciate the different kinds of knowledge arising from each. METHOD OF INSTRUCTION: Discussion OUTLINE:
Session 1: Introduction and Birth
Introduction: Why are we here? Why study medicine from "nonmedical" perspectives? What does literature in particular say to medical practice? How are issues concerning women's health differentially portrayed across different domains? Discussion of readings: Bohjalian: Midwives Session 2: Breast Cancer Discussion of readings: Ostriker: "The Bridge," "The Gurney," "Riddle: Post-Op," "Mastectomy," "What Was Lost," "December 31," "Wintering," "Normal," "Epilogue" Henderson-Holmes: "Snapshots of Grace" Matuschka: "Barbie Gets Breast Cancer" Butler & Rosenblum: "Living in My Changing Body," "Living in an Unstable Body" Session 3: Body Image Video: Slim Hopes Discussion of readings: Sparks: "Skanks" Quindlen: "Happy 35th birthday, Barbie" Yalom: "Fat Lady" Session 4: Motherhood & Abortion Discussion of readings: Clifton: "the lost baby poem" Selzer: "Abortion" Walker: "The Abortion" Massad: "Healers" Hemingway: "Hills Like White Elephants" Lessig: The Fifth Child Silent Scream
Session 5: Domestic Violence Discussion of reading: Session 6: Infertility/Reproductive Technologies Discussion of readings: Bruce: "A Valediction in the Waiting Room" Shacochis: "Missing Children" Janowitz: "Bringing Home Baby" Bialosky: "Ex Utero" Bryan Hecht, M.D.: reproductive technologies Video: Secrets and Lies
Session 7: Family Violence Discussion of readings:
Session 8: Menopause & Aging Discussion of readings: Clifton: "to my last period" Clifton: "poem to my uterus" Wells: "Blood Stop" McCann: "Forty-Five" LeGuin: "The Space Crone" Levertov: "A Woman Alone" Piercy: "The Watch" Piercy: "Something to Look Forward To" Wrap up/evaluation
REQUIREMENTS: 1. Outside of class, students are required to visit/attend/observe the following providers of health care in community settings which usually takes place in the evening: a counseling session for batterers 2. Write a reflective response (no more than one page) to be turned in at the beginning of each class that chronicles your reactions (not simply a retelling) to the readings and the community/clinical experiences when applicable. First entry due at the first class meeting. 3. Write a paper that ties together this interdisciplinary month using one of the topics. At the heart of this paper will be an elaboration of how understandings are differentially produced across different domains. For example, how do literary portrayals of abortion differ from what you know clinically about the procedure and what you witnessed in the Planned Parenthood clinic? What kind of knowledge arose out of each of those experiences for you? How did each affect you? Which portrayal/experience was most "trustworthy" for you? 3-5 pages, typed
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