Sep 30, 2009
KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Women doctors are the focus of a national traveling exhibition at the University of Kansas Medical Center’s Dykes Library from October 3 to November 11, 2009. “Changing the Face of Medicine: Celebrating America’s Women Physicians” tells the extraordinary story of how women in America have struggled over the past two centuries to gain access to medical education and to work in the medical specialty of their choice.
Since Elizabeth Blackwell received a medical degree in 1849, many women have contributed to medical care, education and research, and have achieved success in work once considered “unsuitable” for women. Today, women physicians are researchers on the cutting edge of new medical discoveries, educators, surgeons, family practitioners, specialists, and government officials. “Changing the Face of Medicine” features the life stories of a rich diversity of women physicians from around the nation and highlights the broad range of their medical specialties.
Dr. Marjorie Sirridge, who served as mentor and role model for many local women physicians, will be the keynote speaker at the opening event on October 3. Dr. Sirridge, a hematologist, humanist, and former dean of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, is featured in the exhibit. Guests at this opening event will be welcomed with music by the Kansas City Women's Chorus, and following the lecture all are invited to an elegant reception sponsored by Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences.
Dr. U. Diane Buckingham, a psychiatrist from
become a doctor. These short vignettes are hosted at http://www.metromedkc.org/. During the exhibit, there are speaker presentations each week, and related events are being offered throughout the city. Events are free and open to the public.
The National Library of Medicine (NLM),
Two interactive kiosks traveling with the exhibition offer access to the NLM’s “Local Legends” Web site (www.nlm.nih.gov/locallegends), which features outstanding women physicians from every state, and to a Web site created for the larger exhibition at the NLM (www.nlm.nih.gov/changingthefaceofmedicine). There also are a series of two-hour experiential classes for middle and high school youth, and classes for Girl Scouts. These workshops will offer five to six different stations where students will have a chance to take vital signs, extract DNA from fruit or wheat germ, create slides of bacteria, and explore electronic medical resources.
“We are delighted to have been selected as a site for this exhibition,” said Karen Cole, director of Dykes Library. “Although ‘Changing the Face of Medicine’ focuses on women in medicine, its lessons about persistence, dedication, and courage in one’s life choices speak to everyone – men and women and young adults – and to people in all lines of work.”
Contact Lynn George at (913) 588-0100 or lgeorge@kumc.edufor more information, or visit the exhibit’s Web site at http://library.kumc.edu/womeninmedicine
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