women, history, healthcare history

Meeting Women's Health Care Needs

Health care has been designed around men. We can change this.

Modern science and medicine has been managed, developed, and researched, for the majority, by men. Until 1993, researchers were not required to include women in medical studies for medications and diseases. So, much of what is understood about medicine is based on how males experience and exhibit illness. 

It makes sense, then, that women's health is fairly inequitable - after all, women's bodies are not only different from one another but from men.

Add ethnicity, race, and community factors and women's health equity becomes even more drastic.

On this page:


WOMEN'S HEALTH OUTCOMES ARE DIFFERENT

Maternal Mortality for Black Americans

Black women have startlingly higher rates of maternal mortality than white women - they are 3 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes.
Read more.

Maternal Mortality Nationally

American women as a group have maternal mortality rates that are 2 times as high as France and Canada.
Learn more.

Cardiovascular Outcomes

Women who go to the emergency department for possible cardiovascular issues are 1/3 to 1/2 as likely to receive the proper treatment.
Find out more.

Delays in Diagnosis and Treatment

Women, overall, experience a much higher delay than men in getting a correct diagnosis - even if they are more at risk for a disease.
Read more.

Women's Pain Overlooked

Women with chronic pain are more likely to be prescribed antidepressants and told their pain is a mental health issue than men who are more often treated for the pain directly.
Read why.

Providers Unprepared for LGBTQI Care

About 50% of primary care providers report feeling inadequately prepared to provide care for LGBTQI patients.
Read more.

A Few Significant Moments in the Modern Women's Health Movement

1969 The Doctors’ Case Against the Pill was published. Written by Barbara Seaman, a health columnist, this exposé on the birth control pill described deadly side effects of the pill, including stroke, heart disease, depression. The controversy generated by the book cost Seaman her job but led to the 1970 federal hearing on the safety of the birth control pill.

1973 Our Bodies, Ourselves published by the Boston Women’s Health Collective; cost 30 cents per COPY.

1977 The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned the inclusion of women of childbearing years in Phase 1 and 2 drug trials.

1983 First comprehensive national survey of women’s health by The Commonwealth Fund, New York City.

1989 The Congressional Caucus for Women’s Issues (CCWI) exposed the National Institutes of Health (NIH) lack of research on women and demanded change. The Jacobs Institute of Women’s Health was founded to “advance the understanding and practice of women’s health care.”

Read more here.

WAYS HEALTH EQUITY CAN BE REACHED

Watch and discover more about health equity for all women below.

Health Equity: Hiding in Plain Site

A Recipe for Health Equity

Stigma & Health Equity for Transwomen

HOW CHASE BREXTON IS HELPING TO IMPROVE HEALTH EQUITY FOR CISGENDER & TRANSGENDER WOMEN & GENDER FLUID INDIVIDUALS

Consistently training and educating ourselves and our entire staff in all areas of gender-affirming care, diversity, equity, and inclusion.

Providing care that is accessible, affordable, and accountable – as a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), a Joint Commission Accredited provider, and a Leader in the Healthcare Equality Index, we are on a mission to provide women's health and gender-affirming care that makes care easier, affordable, and that not only meets the rigorous standards that FQHCs and all providers must achieve, but is care that we would like to receive as patients.

Whole person care for all our patients - to make care easier and meet every person's needs, we provide care across the spectrum all in one place: primary care, gender affirming care, OB/GYN, infectious disease care, behavioral health, substance use treatment, dental, social work, pharmacy, and lab services, as well as support and more through our Center for LGBTQ Health Equity.

Equitable, culturally competent, and community-driven care - we meet people where they are and provide care that is what they need; we partner with our patients and embrace and affirm their needs to help them be their healthiest selves.

Expanding our gender affirming care and women's health programs to ensure all women are seen, heard, and given the resources, support, and tools they need to live their fullest, healthiest lives.