While women
make up more than half of the U.S. population, an imbalance remains between who
we are as a nation and who represents us in Congress. The gender disparity is
no different for physicians; more than a third of doctors in the U.S. are
women, yet 100 percent of physicians in Congress are men. To date, there have
only been two female physicians elected to Congress.
But in the
coming midterm election there are six races with a chance at making history.
It's these battles which could make 2018 "The Year of the Female
Physician."
I remember
being a first-time voter in 1992, labeled at the time "The Year of the
Woman." I was a sophomore at Michigan State University and turned 18 just
three days before the election. Following the contentious Supreme Court
hearings involving Clarence Thomas and Anita Hill, an unprecedented number of female
candidates were vying for office that election year.
President
George H.W. Bush was vilified for an appalling answer to the question of when
his party might nominate a woman for President. “This is supposed to be the
year of the women in the Senate," he quipped. "Let's see how they do.
I hope a lot of them lose." Frustrated about the state of gender
inequality in politics, a little known “mom in tennis shoes,” Patty Murray,
decided to run for the U.S. Senate to represent Washington. She won, paving the
way for an unprecedented number of women to enter national politics over the
next 30 years. Yet very few of them have come with a background in medicine.
Since 1960,
just 49 physicians have been elected to the U.S. House or Senate. Currently there are 15 physicians serving in
Congress, 13 of whom are Republican and all of whom are men. Technically, the
first female physician to win a congressional election was a non-voting
delegate from the Virgin Islands, Rep. Donna Christian-Christensen. The only
two voting members were former Reps. Nan Hayworth of New York and Shelley
Sekula-Gibbs of Texas, both Republicans.
In 2018,
eight Democratic female physicians ran for Congress: Dawn Barlow (TN-6), Kyle
Horton (NC-7), Danielle Mitchell (TN-3), Hiral Tipirnini (AZ-8), Jennifer
Zimmerman (FL-1), Shannon Hader (WA-8), Kim Schrier (WA-8), and Nadia Hashimi
(MD-6). After state primaries, six remain in contention for Congressional
seats. Here's who they are, and what their election could portend.
Dr. Dawn
Barlow is an internal medicine physician running in Tennessee’s 6th
Congressional District. She is married to an Iraq War veteran and hopes to
improve the health of veterans. She supports preserving the 10 essential
benefits of the ACA, Medicaid expansion and a single-payer system.
Dr. Kyle
Horton is an internal medicine physician running for the seat in North Carolina’s
7th District. She wants to lower the Medicare age to 50 and provide universal
health coverage though public option coverage that can be purchased. Her focus
is to reduce pharmaceutical costs, expand Medicaid and Medicare, and fund the
Children's Health Insurance Plan (CHIP.)
Dr. Danielle
Mitchell is a family physician running in Tennessee’s 3rd. Raised in poverty,
she lost her 12-year-old brother to a life-threatening, though treatable,
medical condition due to inability to afford health coverage. She supports
universal health care, the preservation of Medicare and Medicaid, and making
pharmaceuticals more affordable.
Hiral
Tipirnini, MD a candidate in Arizona's 8th District, is an emergency physician
who supports repairing the ACA, rather than repealing it. She wants those under
65 to “buy-in” to Medicare and feels free market competition the best way to
reign in healthcare costs.
Jennifer
Zimmerman, MD, is a pediatrician and Filipino immigrant who is running in
Florida’s 1st District. Her campaign slogan is apropos: “This woman can.”
Having faced adversity in her formative years, she believes in Medicare and
Medicaid expansion and universal healthcare.
One of this
years’ most watched races is in Washington State’s 8th District, where Dr. Kim
Schrier is vying for the open seat vacated by Rep. Dave Reichert. Dr. Schrier
is a physician, wife, and mother, with a broad view of the world; but, she is
also a patient who was diagnosed with Type I Diabetes as a teenager.
Her academic
resume is impressive. Despite having chronic disease, she earned an
Astrophysics degree from UC Berkeley, finished medical school at UC Davis, and
did residency at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford, one of the top
pediatric programs in the country. She lacks deep political ties, not unlike
Sen. Murray did once upon a time. Practicing as a pediatrician in Issaquah for
the past 16 years lends a unique perspective — one currently missing — when
Congress debates issues of women’s healthcare, reproductive rights, and
children’s health. Her steely resolve to strengthen our healthcare system so
every person has access to affordable, high-quality care is one ideal the
nation should endorse.
Physicians
are experts on the implementation of policies which facilitate an effective
healthcare system. These six female physicians have the knowledge,
intelligence, and determination that Congress and the nation need. I, for one,
plan to keep my fingers crossed that these female physicians make history on
election night.
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