Five women scientists at the White House
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists
An astronaut, an aquanaut, two astrophysicists and a molecular biologist.
Dr Sian Proctor, Sydney Hamilton, Dr Raven Baxter, Dr Jordan Foreman, and Amethyst Barnes.
@DrSianProctor
@SeeSydSoar
@ravenscimaven
@itsspacejordan
@Amethistaaa
This appeared to be an event to celebrate Blackspaceweek and the NASA Artemis Generation Roundtable (apologies if the information is incorrect)
#womeninmedicine #medicalwriters #womeninstem #medicaljournalists #sciencejournalists
New Nature article looks at how to end misogyny and inequalities in science
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists
Don’t get mad, get equal: putting an end to misogyny in science
Subtle forms of misogyny attack female leadership and coerce women to conform to conventional gender norms. It’s time to call out these behaviours, say Alison Bentley and Rachael Garrett.
Article available at: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02101-x
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #womeninstem #womeninmedicine #medicaljournalists
Meet 10 Women in Science Who Changed the World
#WomenInSTEM #womeninmedicine
#medicalwriters #sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists
Great article in the March Discover magazine. The 10 women mentioned in the article are:
1. Ada Lovelace, Mathematician
2. Marie Curie, Physicist and Chemist
3. Janaki Ammal, Botanist
4. Chien-Shiung Wu, Physicist
5. Katherine Johnson, Mathematician
6. Rosalind Franklin, Chemist
7. Vera Rubin, Astronomer
8. Gladys West, Mathematician
9. Flossie Wong-Staal, Virologist and Molecular Biologist
10. Jennifer Doudna, Biochemist
#sciencejournalists #womeninstem #womeninmedicine #medicalwriters #medicaljournalists
The prognosis for women with early invasive breast cancer has improved substantially since the 1990s
#breastcancer #medicaljournalists #womeninstem #medicalwriters
[Retooted with hashtags and error amended]
The earlier we detect and treat breast cancer, the better the outcome.
#medicaljournalists #womeninstem #medicalwriters #breastcancer
Women diagnosed today are 66% less likely to die from breast cancer than 20 years ago
#breastcancer #medicaljournalists #womeninstem #medicalwriters
In a study looking at half a million women in England with early breast cancer, those diagnosed between 1993-1999 had a 5-year breast cancer mortality risk of 14.4%, but those diagnosed 2010-2015 had a 5-year mortality risk of 4.9%.
Read the full paper by Professor Carolyn Taylor and her team here: https://www.bmj.com/content/381/bmj-2022-074684
#medicaljournalists #womeninstem #breastcancer #medicalwriters
The mental-health crisis in science
#STEM; #sciencejournalists; #medicaljournalists
[As seen on the blue bird thing]
Researchers are much more likely than the general population to experience depression and anxiety. And recent studies suggest that scientists’ mental-health struggles are a direct result of a toxic research culture
#sciencejournalists #medicaljournalists #stem