rels 300 / nurs 330 6 november 2014 social bias & discrimination reflective journal #6: social...

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Rels 300 / Nurs 330 6 November 2014 Reflective Journal #6: Social Bias & Discrimination

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Page 1: Rels 300 / Nurs 330 6 November 2014 Social Bias & Discrimination Reflective Journal #6: Social Bias & Discrimination

Rels 300 / Nurs 3306 November 2014

Reflective Journal #6:

Social Bias & Discrimination

Page 2: Rels 300 / Nurs 330 6 November 2014 Social Bias & Discrimination Reflective Journal #6: Social Bias & Discrimination

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Your aptitude for personal and professional moral agency, insight and accountability depends on capacities to detect and address bias, discrimination and lack of empathy. Reflective journaling can assist with this task.

How do reflective journals relate to our course objectives?

Page 3: Rels 300 / Nurs 330 6 November 2014 Social Bias & Discrimination Reflective Journal #6: Social Bias & Discrimination

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THE GLOBE AND MAIL – SEPTEMBER 20, 2011

“Canadian doctors are considering a policy that would bar obese women from trying to have babies through fertility treatments – provoking debate over whether the fat have the same reproductive rights as the thin.”

The Ottawa Fertility Centre already turns away women with a Body Mass Index > 35

They DO NOT turn away women who smokeSome clinics DO turn away women who are

over 40

Canadian MDs consider denying fertility treatments to obese women

Page 4: Rels 300 / Nurs 330 6 November 2014 Social Bias & Discrimination Reflective Journal #6: Social Bias & Discrimination

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Potential medical risks for women over 40, or for smokers:

Reduced effectiveness of fertility drugs

High blood pressure Risk of stroke Gestational diabetes

Potential medical risks for obese women:

Higher doses of fertility drugs

High blood pressure Risk of stroke Gestational diabetes

Do fertility interventions and reproductive technologies pose

medical risks for women?

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“Denying fertility treatments to obese women stigmatizes and discriminates against those most in need. Excess weight is itself a barrier to conceiving naturally, and obesity rates are rising” says another.

If obese women are denied fertility treatments, does this represent an acceptable form of medical paternalism?

“A patient doesn’t have the right to make a choice that’s going to be harmful to them,” says one expert.

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Are you aware of other ways in which North

American cultural attitudes demonstrate

evidence of social discrimination?

Do we live in a culture which demonstrates a social bias that stigmatizes or discriminates against obese persons?