MAYA DUSENBERY is a writer and editor of the award-winning site Feministing.com. She has been a fellow at Mother Jones magazine and a columnist for Pacific Standard magazine. Before becoming a journalist, she worked at the National Institute for Reproductive Health. A Minnesota native, she is currently based in the Twin Cities.
“Ever since the centuries of burning women healers as witches,
because they taught women how to govern our own bodies, thus to
control reproduction—the medical world hasn’t included all of
humanity. Doing Harm shows what is left to be done, and directs
both women and men toward healing.” — Gloria Steinem
“Maya Dusenbery’s exhaustively researched book is equal parts
infuriating and energizing. No woman will see the medical
establishment, and perhaps even more profound, her own body, the
same way after reading it. In a just world, it would be required
reading in medical schools from this day forward.” — Courtney
E. Martin, author of Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters
“Maya Dusenbery brings new life to one of the most urgent yet
under-discussed feminist issues of our time. Anyone who cares about
women’s health needs to read this book.” — Jessica Valenti,
author of Sex Object
“Dusenbery challenges a new generation of women and
practitioners to fight for medical equity—shinning a harsh light on
the sex bias that pervades every level of medicine. It’s outrageous
that such malignant neglect exists more than two decades after the
government acknowledged the gaps in knowledge about women’s
health.” — Leslie Laurence, co-author of Outrageous
Practices
“In this groundbreaking book, Maya shows how the same forces that
hold women back in society more broadly lead to sub-par medical
care and inadequate attention to health issues that impact women.
Every doctor, scientist, health care provider and researcher should
read this book. And so should every woman.” — Jill Filipovic,
author of The H-Spot
“Doing Harm is a deeply researched and very readable exploration of
the systematic mistreatment of women in our medical system—and how
even those with the best intentions perpetuate it. This book is an
eye-opener; may it also be a call for real, sustained change.” —
Kate Harding, author of Asking For It and co-editor of Nasty
Women
“An intensive, timely spotlight…Within an organized, well-balanced
combination of scientific and social research and moving personal
stories, Dusenbery makes a convincing case for the need for drastic
industry reform and clinical refinement.” — Kirkus
“Dusenbery’s excellent book makes the sexism plaguing women’s
health care hard to ignore…skillfully interweaving history, medical
studies, current literature, and hard data to produce damning
evidence that women wait longer for diagnoses, receive inadequate
pain management, and are often told they are imagining symptoms
that are taken seriously in men.” — Publishers Weekly, starred
review
“Editor’s Choice by the New York Times” —
“As seen on FRESH AIR” —
“an antidote to the isolation and maddening self-doubt that this
all-too-common dismissal can impose. Her careful evidence answers
the uncomfortable question that so often niggles in the doctor’s
office: ‘Am I getting lesser care because I’m a woman?’” — Ms.
Magazine
“well researched, wonderfully truculent…” — NYT Daily
“Doing Harm methodically and thoroughly lays out an indictment of
the medical systems that still largely discount the experiences of
women both individually and collectively. Doing Harm demands
nothing short of system-wide change, starting with a call to
providers at the most basic level” — Rewire
“Dusenbery, who was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis,
masterfully takes down the wide-reaching systemic gender bias
in science and medicine that prevents doctors
from truly hearing female patients.” —
Health.com
“In her new book, Dusenbery provides a comprehensive and
much-needed look at how sexism in the medical field is hurting
women. Much of the discrepancy in treatment stems from the
“knowledge gap,” which Dusenbery writes about in depth” — Pacific
Standard
“Doing Harm demonstrates persuasively that subconscious gender-bias
in medicine is very real and pervasive for women of all
backgrounds, as doctors continue to apply a “one-size-fits-all”
method of diagnosis and medical evaluation to their
women patients.” — Pacific Standard
“Dusenbery peels back the sick layers of America’s paternal
healthcare system. She plays both patient and journalist,
seamlessly combining history, research, and interviews into an
easily digestible must-read. 5/5” — Bust Magazine
“Dusenbery digs deeper into the issue, exploring the way gender
bias in medicine often leaves women struggling for proper care.” —
Tonic - VICE
“the medical establishment has a poor history of taking women’s
health issues seriously —a history that Feministing editor
Dusenbery takes on with full force in her new book” — Harpers
Bazaar
“Through interviews with patients, doctors, and experts as well as
a deep cultural analysis, Dusenbery presents a horrifying picture
of what it means to be a woman who’s dismissed by her doctors.” —
Bitch Media
“Dusenbery’s book, based on two years of research into a host of
conditions, exposes the systemic causes of these disparities and
provides critically relevant information for the public—and for
those in medicine, psychology, and the research sciences.” —
Greater Good Science Center
“In Doing Harm, Dusenbery explores how biases and sexism in
medicine lead to harmful outcomes for women.” — Popular Science
“Dusenbery says these experiences fit into a larger pattern of
gender bias in medicine. Her new book, Doing Harm, makes the case
that women’s symptoms are often dismissed and misdiagnosed” — NPR -
FRESH AIR
“Her new book is all about how women receive sub-par medical care
because the medical community knows comparatively less about their
bodies and diseases and too often doesn’t trust women’s reports of
their own symptoms” — WNYC The Brian Lehrer Show
“Maya Dusenbery explores how medicine often leaves women on the
periphery of real medical advancement. She explores the horrific
reality of how medical practitioners and academic researchers
completely dismiss women.” — Marie Claire
“Dusenbery writes about women’s pain and illnesses being overlooked
because of their menstrual cramps, menopause, even entering
motherhood.” — Dame Magazine
“In her book, Dusenbery traces how women are overlooked in every
corner of illness, from autoimmune diseases to chronic pain (which
disproportionately affects women and includes everything from
irritable bowel syndrome to migraines to arthritis).” — The Cut
“Maya Dusenbery’s book, Doing Harm, explains how women’s health
issues have historically been dismissed—and what we can do about it
now.” — Broadly
“Doing Harm is a fearless account of the incompetence of our
culture when it comes to treating women properly. Dusenbery writes
about the institutional systems that are against women—from
philosophy to pharmacy to popular culture—in an accessible,
engaging, and organized narrative.” — The Rumpus
“Maya Dusenbery has added immensely to the literature on women’s
health.” — NY Journal of Books
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