Woman Wants To Rename Certain Body Parts Because They Are “Offensive”

A professor of anatomy from Australia is pushing the world health community to rename body parts that she finds , “irrelevant and misogynistic.”

Some of the common body parts that Dr. Kristin Small argues need a new name include the Adam’s apple and the Achilles tendon, which are named after men despite being present in both the bodies of men and women.

Because these body parts are not gender- or -specific, Dr. Small wants their names updated to reflect all people and not just the male half of the population. The professor hopes that through her initiative, she will be able to transform the anatomical language used across the globe, starting in societies like Australia and the United States.

Dr. Kristin Small doesn’t just teach anatomy classes. She is also a specialist obstetrician from Queensland. As a female medical professional, she has an awareness of the terms floating around the medical community and believes it is time for an update. That’s why she is leading the charge by using her authority as a professor to teach her students something a bit different. Instead of using the names of “men, kings, and (male) gods” to describe human body parts, she thinks there are more anatomically correct solutions that can relate to every person on the globe.

“I think we have a personal choice to decolonize our language, and these historical terms will fade out,” Dr. Small told the Courier-Mail.

During her exams, Dr. Small requires her students to use the current names but educates her students about how they are viable alternatives to the “dead man’s name” that is currently in usage. She spends some of her time outside of the classroom fighting to change these anatomical terms for the benefit of all.

Councilmember, Dr. Nisha Khot, of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, agrees with Dr. Small that these “dead man” eponyms will soon be obsolete.
“The young trainee doctors are mostly keen to learn the more relevant language and are often shocked when they hear the origins of some medical terms,” she said.

One common example of a misogynistic or term used in anatomy and the medical community is the “hysterectomy.” This term originates from the belief that women have a weaker constitution than their male counterparts and therefore suffered from emotional hysteria. Back in the day, doctors would remove a woman’s uterus to treat female hysteria, hence the procedure’s current name.

Dr. Khot is among the group of academics pioneering the name “uterectomy” instead. Not only is this term anatomically correct, but it also is not based on a view of a male’s superiority.

“The push for change may have started in the area of women’s health, but the conversation is now in the wider health community. It just makes sense for the medics but also for the patients to use more understandable terms,” Dr. Khot said.

Common names of body parts like the Adam’s apple or the Achilles tendon are named after historical men. The speculum, a gynecological instrument used to perform a pap smear, was named after an American slave trader.

Related Posts

A Homeless Man Helped Me Change a Flat Tire on Route 9 Where My Son Disappeared 20 Years Ago – What He Left on My Passenger Seat Brought Me to My Knees

Before, I was just a mother driving along Route 9 with my seven-year-old boy beside me, listening to him plead for a Sprite as if it were…

The Day Everything Changed

The legal case stretched on for months. Derek’s attorney tried to paint everything as a family disagreement, but witnesses, medical records, and evidence told a different story….

The Day Everything Changed

That evening, my mother called repeatedly. When I finally answered, her first question was not whether I was safe. Instead, she demanded to know what I had…

The Day Everything Changed

At Riverside Methodist Hospital, doctors confirmed that my ribs were badly bruised but not broken. For the first time in a long while, medical professionals spoke to…

The Day Everything Changed

Officer Grant Miller did not need to raise his voice. “Hands where I can see them,” he repeated calmly. Derek lifted his hands halfway and immediately began…

“I Judged My Daughter’s Boyfriend in Seconds—It Took One Phone Call to Change Everything”

The first time Lila brought her boyfriend home, Mara expected an ordinary family dinner. Instead, she immediately judged him by his tattoos, work-worn clothes, and rugged appearance….