Wait wait wait.
Yet another of the American Enterprise Institute’s anti-feminist “feminists” takes on “the conventional wisdom” about women in science.
It’s the conventional wisdom that women are held back in science because of sexism. A new paper by a research team at Cornell University reports that young women faculty members prosper in math-based fields of science. Statistically, women are less likely to continue on in certain science fields, but there are cultural conventions that need to be taken into account. Visiting Factual Feminist Sally Satel will discuss these factors in this episode.
But there are cultural conventions? Well of course there are – and those cultural conventions are part of what sexism is. Why would the presence of cultural conventions undermine claims that women are held back in science because of sexism?
But Satel says it does.
She says women and men without children have pretty equal rates of publication, but men with children have higher rates than women with children. But don’t go thinking that’s sexism – oh no, it’s something completely different.
More research is needed to fill in this picture, but you could speculate that this disparity exists because fathers are more likely to have a spouse who’s caring full time for the children than are the mothers. It’s not rocket science. It’s easier to have kids when there’s someone at home doing the childcare. This reflects cultural conventions, not sexism in science. [1:50 to 2:20]
I haven’t yet listened to how she explains that absurd claim, because I was so gobsmacked by it that I wanted to yell about it first.
Hello? The idea that women must or should do all the childcare while men do none of it (or share it only in leisure hours) is indeed a cultural convention, and that cultural convention is sexist. Defining people’s duties and tasks by what gender they are is indeed sexism. The fact that men are more likely to have a spouse who’s caring full time for the children than are women is indeed sexism.
Let me guess – Satel’s explanation will be that this pattern simply reflects people’s natural unforced preferences, now that we have totally eradicated sexism and thus made all preferences free.
Ha. Like hell we have.
Athywren; Kitty Wrangler says
Yeah! It’s not cultural sexism, it’s cultural convention! Way different spelling. Therefore it’s cool. Woohoo.
doublereed says
Rate of publication is such a specific statistic, it really makes me think there is some major cherry-picking going on here (even with that blatantly obvious error you point out). I know she said some various other statistics which showed progress, but I think I’d have to read more in-depth.
Many of the other statistics seemed very specific like “tenure-track associate professors” which, from my understanding of academia, is quite a small amount. Many universities have become far stingier with tenure than ever before. Makes me highly skeptical.
josefjohann says
This reminds me of common arguments you hear against the existence of the wage gap. “There’s no wage gap because women leave work for childcare.”
Right, but that’s just part of what the wage gap is. It’s not so much disputing the empirical phenomenon, it’s just slicing off certain parts of that phenomenon and claiming they “don’t count” for various reasons.
Hj Hornbeck says
Never heard of the name before, so I went on a quick hunt to find out more about Sally Satel. I quickly found this:
Yep, she sounds pretty racist. As a reviewer to one of her books put it:
Hj Hornbeck says
And would it shock you to learn both Satel and Sommers are very skeptical of PTSD?
Al Dente says
The Roman Army recognized PTSD and developed reasonably effective ways of dealing with it. Basically senior NCOs would counsel the affected legionnaires, being sympathetic and helping the solder deal with his stress. The legionnaires would be kept in the combat zone and remain under military discipline. The Romans knew that some soldiers didn’t recover from PTSD and, after examination by medical personnel, would be medically discharged.
themann1086 says
Me thinking to myself: “My opinion of Sommers cannot possibly get any low-”
FFFFFFFUUUUUUUUUUUUU-
Pierce R. Butler says
Visiting Factual Feminist Sally Satel …
Is “Factual Feminist” a regular position in the AEI, with Resident and Visiting job slots?
Do they get paid 3/4 of what their equivalent Fellows receive?
Ophelia Benson says
^ Zing!
karmacat says
I just found out she is a psychiatrist so she should know better when talking about PTSD. But I guess that’s what happens when you sell your soul to the American Enterprise Institute. People are not given the diagnosis of PTSD unless their symptoms persist after 4 weeks. Before then it is called Acute Stress disorder. But early intervention is still very useful and may prevent some symptoms of PTSD. the diagnosis of PTSD is always being researched and refined over the decades.
In 1980, DSM 3 came out and was very different from the first two. It was a more detailed list of diagnoses and symptoms with the purpose of using this for research. If everyone is on the same page in terms of diagnosis, then the research is more useful.
Satel complains about PC taking over medicine, but it is important. Research has shown that blacks are more often diagnosed with schizophrenia than bipolar yet more whites are more likely to be diagnosed with bipolar disorder. This obviously shows an “unconscious” bias when diagnosing different patients. I am now aware of this bias so hopefully I can come up with an accurate diagnosis for a patient.
there is more I could say, but clearly Satel if full of crap, to put it delicately
Jeremy Shaffer says
Maybe I’m just not reading it right but does this part from the quote in HJ Hornbeck’s #5:
seem contradictory with this:
In the first part they seem think a laughable aspect of PTSD diagnosis is that it might be months later before it manifests, yet turn around and say you shouldn’t expect to see it right away either. Like I said, i may just be reading this wrong but it seems they are just saying what ever they feel is needed in order to paint PTSD diagnosis in a negative light.
GroceryDancer says
@HJ Hornbeck (4):
I’m ethnically Jewish. This means that I’m more at risk for certain specific genetic conditions (such as Tay-Sachs, to name the most well-known). If I go in for testing, I want the doctor to be taking that into account and checking me for things that I’m particularly susceptible to, even if the incident of such conditions averaged across the whole population is small enough that it wouldn’t ordinarily make sense to test for that.
Now, if the doctor said, “You’re Jewish, so that explains your long nose,” then yeah, I’d be pissed off. But I don’t think Satel is saying that.
Ophelia Benson says
Yes, that – I didn’t see that thing Satel said as racist either, for the same reason. Just sensible statistically-based practice I would think.
Robert B. says
Isn’t “cultural conventions that hold women back” the definition of sexism? Of what else does sexism consist?
Michael Brew says
A generous interpretation could be that she is claiming that the scientific community, itself, isn’t the source of the problem, but the broader cultural sexism of women being expected to be the primary child-rearers is. This may be a major contributing cause and certainly needs to be addressed in our society, but that just means that those in the STEM fields need to take that into account and not just wash their hands of it and say “not our problem.” Other fields manage it without much issue, so it seems they should be able to do something.
Pteryxx says
re @12 and @13 –
It would be, if the statistics hadn’t been skewed by racism in the first place, when they were established. One famous example is the “race setting” on spirometers, which measure lung function.
How Racism Creeps Into Medicine
Because of the race setting, black patients with lower lung capacities get marked as in the “normal” range, meaning they have to be sicker to qualify for disability, among other things. This also camouflages the detrimental effects of pollution and poverty.
Pteryxx says
Another couple of examples of race bias built into medicine:
Boston Review – Bodies with Histories
Pteryxx says
One more article interviewing Braun: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-06-spirometers-built-in.html
Anyway, there’s a bunch of evidence for unexamined “innate differences” built into the assumptions underlying medicine. People really, really, really want to explain systemic bias away as biology.
karmacat says
Thanks Ptyrexx for the info. People judge race based on external characteristics but that only tells part of an individual’s genetic make-up. I have a patient whose diagnosis of Crohn’s was delayed because her doctors didn’t think blacks got Crohn’s.
When I was a medical student I had a VA patient who needed home oxygen but his number wasn’t low enough. So I was instructed to have him walk up stairs until his number was low enough. Sometimes the system can prevent patients from getting the best care. Most doctors are white and there is an unconscious bias to want to help someone who looks like you. Not being aware of these biases can negatively affect how patients are treated
johnthedrunkard says
All that obsessive skull measuring missed the fact that the only correlate for skull size is BODY size. I’m just remembering from Gould’s ‘Mismeasure of Man,’ but I think the argument holds up.
G.B. Shaw wrote that one can use statistics to prove that wearing a top hat is a cure for malnutrition. There ARE, essentially trivial, differences between sub-Saharan Africans and Northern Europeans. I’d never heard the claim about lung capacity before. Does it hold up as well as the debunked claims about skull volume?
And how about the ‘cultural convention’ by which black skin exerts a magnetic attraction for bullets?
Hj Hornbeck says
Pteryxx did an excellent job of pointing out some of the racism in medicine. But there’s a greater problem here: what is a “black” person? In some countries, Barack Obama wouldn’t qualify and even in the USA Americans aren’t sure what race he is. So if the US president waltzed into a walk-in clinic for depression, his starting level of Prozac would depend more on the opinion of the doctor he sees than his own physiology.
These lines in Dr. Satel’s article raised huge red flags for me, too:
Notice what’s missing there: the percentage of Caucasians and Asians who are slow metabolizers. If X percent of them are, then Dr. Satel is arguing those patients should suffer greater side effects so that (100 – X) percent can potentially have quicker resolution of their depressive symptoms. If X = 0%, that’s totally cool, if it’s 40% or greater it’s most certainly not, but what if X = 5%? Are we justified in letting 25% of Caucasians/Asians suffer greater side-effects to benefit the remaining 75%? Dr. Satel left out critical information, which is important because she’s the only person I can find who’s argued for different doses due to race.
And we have reason to think she’s wrong, too. Some digging brought up a 2006 article on clinical guidelines for prescribing anti-depressants, based on allele frequency.[1] Here’s a summary of Table 2, which covers genetic variants found in various races (UM = ultra metabolizers, PM = poor metabolizers):
Caucasians: 1-10% UM, 5-10% PM type A, 2-4% PM type B
East Asians: 0-2% UM, 1% PM type A, 10-25% PM type B
African Americans: 2% UM, 1-2% PM type A, 1-5% PM type B
North Africans/Middle East: 10-29% UM, 2% PM type A, 2% PM type B
That article doesn’t give race-specific diagnostic criteria, because there isn’t any good advice to give, the differences between races are small and with huge error bars attached. Instead, it pushes targeted genetic testing that would deliver much better results that assessing someone’s skin or ancestry. Note too that it claims about 4% of African-Americans as poor metabolizers, not 40%, and that if any race could be considered a poor metabolizer, it would be Asians.
I also have to wonder how good a doctor Satel is. The most common side-effects of Prozac are hives, restlessness, itching, and rashes. The cost of delivering the wrong dosage is pretty trivial. Wouldn’t it have been better to prescribe the same dosage to everyone, then ask people with those symptoms to alert her immediately so she could decrease the dosage? That way, those who respond well to the typical dosage get their faster relief, while those that don’t only suffer for a few weeks.
I could go on, but I think you get the gist.
[1] de Leon, Jose, Scott C. Armstrong, and Kelly L. Cozza. “Clinical guidelines for psychiatrists for the use of pharmacogenetic testing for CYP450 2D6 and CYP450 2C19.” Psychosomatics 47.1 (2006): 75-85.
Kevin Kehres says
@18 Pteryxx
Whites have better lung function?
Despite the fact that Kenyans and Ethiopians are demonstrably the best marathoners? And there hasn’t been a white winner of the Olympic 100 meter dash since 1972? And there hasn’t been a white cornerback in the NFL since forever?
Innate, my lily-white ass…try poverty, pollution, and other asthma-triggers.