ABSTRACT

Women have a longstanding and unique connection to healing and health care. The feminine perspective, however, has been discounted and decimated through the last 600 years. Now general social and political changes, as well as increasing numbers of women practitioners in health and mental health, are leading to a re-emergence of the feminine perspective in addressing women’s needs and in providing health care. This paper traces some of the elements in the history of women and their influences on present day models of health care. It emphasizes women’s roles as healers, as patients and as crafters of a new synthesis of health care delivery in the 21st century.