From  "Larger Fish to Catch Here than Midwives": Midwifery and the Medical Professionin Nineteenth-Century OntarioFrom: Caring and Curing |
This chapter attempts to comprehend the early evolution of Ontario’s midwives |
J.T.H Connor |
31 |
1994 |
$3.41 Add
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From  "No Longer an Invisible Minority": Women Physicians and Medical Practice in Late Twentieth-Century North America’From: Caring and Curing |
While Canadian medicine even today continues to be male-dominated in terms of numbers and of power, and medicine itself still remains at the pinnacle of the late twentieth-century health care … |
Deborah Gorham |
28 |
1994 |
$3.08 Add
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From  Science and Technique: Nurses’ Work in a Canadian Hospital, 1920-1939From: Caring and Curing |
For the most part, feminist scholars have concluded that until at least the post-World War II years nursing work fell outside the modern paradigm of science. This chapter challenges that … |
Kathryn McPherson |
30 |
1994 |
$3.30 Add
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From  Shifting Professional Boundaries: Gender Conflict in Public Health, 1920-1925From: Caring and Curing |
Conflict and contradictions were inevitable as public health nurses and physicians attempted to work together. |
Meryn Stuart |
21 |
1994 |
$2.31 Add
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