OBGYN.net Young Woman Career Corner Archives

Information on Mesothelioma

Career Choices: Certified Nursing Assistant Part 1: What is the role of the CNA?
Career Choices: Certified Nursing Assistant Part 2: The Hands-on World of the CNA
Page, Moderator, CNA chatroom
Reprinted with permission from Cyber-Nurse.com

"What does a perinatologist do?"
OBGYN.net Interview with David Augustus Nagey, MD,  Pregnancy & Birth Associate Professor, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, The Johns Hopkins Hospital

"The Road To Becoming A Nurse Practitioner"
Pat Sonnenstuhl BSN, CNM, ARNP, RH
Things are very different today than they were when I was in high school in 1965. There are so many career options in the health field now for women that don't require years and years of education. If you are in high school, and think this might be a direction in which you want to go, hopefully this article will be helpful for you. If you are already out of high school, and are thinking about this career, this article will provide you with further direction.

From ACOG Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Barbara Nesbitt, Editor of OBGYN.net, interviews Katy Dawley, CNM  with the American College of Midwives on "Midwifery"

"Becoming an Ob/Gyn"
D. Ashley Hill, MD
A number of people have expressed confusion about the education and qualifications one must possess in order to become an obstetrician/gynecologist. This brief summary is an effort to clarify this issue and to provide insight into the training and lifestyle of ob/gyns....

"A midwife with a beard: healthcare and gender in early modern Europe"
Ine Berkelmans,
A male nursery school teacher doesn't surprise anybody nowadays, but a lady who's asphalting the road still tangles. Mockery is often a first reaction: Queer, softy, battle-axe: a stream of abuse for men and woman who step outside their gender-scope. Gender is the social-cultural construction of the biological notion of sex.

From ISGE, Montreal, Canada
"Young Doctors"
James Daniell, MD, interviews David Huno, Resident

Careers in Science, Women in Neuroscience Research: Just Do It - A. Penn

EngineerGirl