All posts tagged: editor: elisabeth paquette

What Do We Really Know About “Obesity”?

What Do We Really Know About “Obesity”?

Photo by Kenny Eliason on Unsplash. In 1864, the scientist Benjamin Apthorp Gould was appointed to conduct a survey of the physical characteristics of thousands of Civil War soldiers, sailors, and students. Five years later, what emerged from the published report was a narrative of racial difference. An entire chapter was devoted to lung function: making use of the recently developed spirometer (a measuring device), Gould declared a “very striking” difference between the capacity of Black and white lungs. Gould’s findings were consistent with previous conjectures, where the apparent lower lung function of Black people was part of a justification for enslavement. The report also had a significant legacy, contributing to the establishment of racial difference in lung function as a scientific fact. The assumption that Black people have lower “normal” lung capacity became built into medical practice: a “race correction” in the equation that translates spirometer readings into a measurement of lung function automatically lowered the threshold of “normal” lung function for Black patients. This meant that the same spirometer reading could be categorized …

When Gender Policing Backfires | Blog of the APA

When Gender Policing Backfires | Blog of the APA

Recently, I was coming home from a conference, and I had just gotten through TSA at an airport that I had been to before. I noticed something that I had noticed the previous time I was there, which is a startlingly long line. The line that I had noticed previously is the line to the women’s restroom. I usually notice the line to the women’s restroom at major events, whether Comic-Con, a concert, a speech, or a book signing; the lines for women and men are literally night and day. This moment at the airport was no different. As per usual, there was no line for the men’s room; men and boys went in and out of the restroom like clockwork. Yet the line for women and girls moved more slowly than molasses on a cold winter’s day. The long women’s bathroom line is not an unusual phenomenon, but it is still painful to witness. We can make planes, trains, cars, and Wi-Fi fast, but not the restroom line designated for women and girls. One …