National Women Physicians Day 2023

JL Lycette, M.D.
3 min readFeb 3, 2023
Three women physicians standing together

Today, February 3, 2023, is National Women Physicians Day!

To recognize the day, I thought it would be fun to put together a roundup of my favorite blog posts on Women In Medicine over the past two years.

Gendered Expectations of Physician Accessibility

Classic gender symbols of female and male in white circles on a black background

My reflection on how my daily clinic experience is vastly different from that of many of my male counterparts.

“Patients didn’t hold it against my male colleagues for not answering their emails. ‘He’s just too busy,’ was a common sentiment expressed. The unexpressed corollary was that somehow, I, as a female physician, was not too busy.”

Galadriel, Girl, You’re Being Gaslit

A meme of Gandalf, the wizard from Lord of the Rings, a grizzled older man with long white hair and beard, standing with his two staffs crossed in front of him, with the caption, “You shall not gaslight!”

A satirical piece warning Galadriel, from The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, about the dangers of the men around her gaslighting her.

“What is this gaslighting I speak of? No, it’s not a light for dark places when all other lights go out.”

Dear Patient: An Open Letter on Why I’ve Been Working Part-time During the Pandemic

A woman sitting at her desk with her laptop and a load of laundry next to her

A piece I wrote in December 2021 in which I highlight the struggle of working as a physician while trying to continue to homeschool my youngest child before the approval of the Covid-19 vaccine for children.

“This has been my life, and the life of many women physicians, since the pandemic.”

Serious Hair

A row of hands holding up hairstyling implements (brushes, scissors, etc)

A reflection on over twenty years of trying to figure out just how I’m supposed to look as a woman physician, weaving in my GenX childhood and movie influences.

If you want to be taken seriously, you have to have serious hair. That line has lived in my brain since 1988. I was fifteen years old, and I was convinced Melanie Griffith’s character in Working Girl had revealed one of life’s secret truths.”

First Smiles and Second Opinions

A bunch of pink and orange balloons. Half of the ballons have smiley faces. Two of the ballons have frown faces.

A reflection on how the world judges women whether we smile — or don’t.

“Maybe, for all of my life, the smile has been the mask.”

Originally published at https://jenniferlycette.com on February 3, 2023.

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JL Lycette, M.D.
JL Lycette, M.D.

Written by JL Lycette, M.D.

Physician & Author. THE ALGORITHM WILL SEE YOU NOW out 3/2/23. PREORDER https://bit.ly/THEALGORITHM

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