I was a medical student at
NYU shortly after New York became the first state to legalize abortions in
1970. The big change, from a student’s point of view, was that deliveries at
Bellevue plummeted. To ensure that we received training in obstetrics, NYU
began sending us to Booth Memorial Hospital in Queens which served a
middle-class population who wanted children. It was much nicer than Bellevue
and the staff obstetricians were congenial.
During NYU’s obstetric
rotation, students divided up into teams; mine consisted of me and two women.
One evening after midnight at
Booth Memorial we were waiting for a delivery when the legendary Doctor Epstein
arrived, an elderly obstetrician with an immense practice who had graduated
medical school in 1928. With time on his hands, he gave my companions career
advice.
They shouldn’t go into
surgery, he warned. Surgeons must stand for hours. Being prone to varicose
veins, women cannot tolerate that. He suggested anesthesiology because it’s so
boring. Women are better at boring stuff. Since women have a natural love of
children they couldn’t go wrong with pediatrics or child psychiatry.
This being a prefeminist era,
the women were more amused than offended. But both went into pediatrics.
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