“…It has been suggested that women possess greater sensitivity to social issues than do men, which will, over time, affect the medical profession's position on matters such as national health insurance (Heins et al, 1979;Relman, 1980), or at least its willingness to experiment with different economic arrangements for medical practice (Relman, 1989). The most widely shared prediction about the effects of increased numbers of women in medicine has been that women physicians will give the profession an increased capacity for demonstrating caring attitudes toward patients (e.g., Elliott, 1981;Zeno, 1982), which may be "more valuable in healing than all the medicine in the textbooks" (Keeler, 1980:8).…”