Female Medical Professionals Are Posting Bikini Selfies in Response to Sexist Study

#MedBikini went viral after a sexist study claimed that medical professionals wearing bikinis in pictures on social media was unprofessional and inappropriate. Jul. 30 2020, Updated 1:30 p.m. ET The Journal of Vascular Surgery recently published a study entitled, "Prevalence of unprofessional social media content among young vascular surgeons." The goal of the study was

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#MedBikini went viral after a sexist study claimed that medical professionals wearing bikinis in pictures on social media was unprofessional and inappropriate.

Robin Zlotnick - AuthorBy

Jul. 30 2020, Updated 1:30 p.m. ET

The Journal of Vascular Surgery recently published a study entitled, "Prevalence of unprofessional social media content among young vascular surgeons." The goal of the study was ostensibly to prove that "publicly available social media content may affect patient choice of physician, hospital, and medical facility." The study claims that unprofessional social media content may also "affect professional reputation among peers and employers."

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The problem with the study is that it was conducted by three men who considered bikinis — widely available women's swimwear — "inappropriate attire," and categorized bikini pics as unprofessional along with drug / drug paraphernalia content, controversial political and religious content, and controversial social topics.

If you are a true #heforshe then you must speak up against this disturbing study

3 men created fake social media accounts to purposefully spy on applicants

Worse they are shaming our women physician colleagues for wearing bikinis 🤦🏽‍♂️ #MedTwitter #MedBikini #retraction pic.twitter.com/MvNZoBnok2

— Mudit Chowdhary (@DrChowdharyMD) July 24, 2020
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Bikinis are, of course, just bathing suits. People wearing bikinis shouldn't be sexualized or deemed "inappropriate" at all. On top of that, what someone chooses to wear in their personal life shouldn't affect how they're treated or seen in the professional realm. Doctors are human beings, too.

Female health care professionals across the world started sharing pictures of themselves in bikinis to support the idea that women who wear them are smart, capable, and should be treated as such. They're using the hashtag #MedBikini on Twitter and Instagram to flood your feed with responses to this sexist study.

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View this post on Instagram

Dr Bikini 👙will save your life in the middle of the Ocean when you get hit by a boat. I will take you out of the ocean on a surfboard turned into a backboard, tie off your exsanguinating wound with my rash guard, take you to my under equipped urgent care, stabilize you in 1 hour with an IV, oxygen, morphine, fluids, Foley, and put your open femur fracture in Bucks traction, fly you by helicopter to a local hospital, order and interpret all the labs, xrays, CT scans, suture/staple all your wounds, splint your clavicle/ humerus and scapula fractures,sedate you, put a chest tube in your 5 rib fractured hemopneumothorax and fly you by jet to a specialty hospital in another country....all in my you guessed it 👙 I am an Emergency Medicine Physician standing in solidarity with female vascular surgeons today. NEWSFLASH: FEMALE DOCTORS CAN WEAR WHATEVER THEY WANT. ⁣ Female doctors, nurses, NPs/PAs, all healthcare professionals - we can wear a bikini, a dress, or we can wear scrubs. This does not change how good we are at being a healthcare provider. We can wear WHATEVER we want on our free time, and still save your life. Sexism in medicine is alive and well. But we won’t let that stop us. In this ridiculous article published in a well respected medical journal, the vascular surgery authors sought out to determine how many vascular surgeons had participated in what they state is “inappropriate social media behavior”, which they defined as FEMALES IN BIKINIS - BUT GET THIS: NOT MEN IN BATHING SUITS.  Other topics considered “inappropriate” were Halloween costumes (should I take down my pregnant nun costume?) GUN CONTROL and politics.  The “study” was written by 3 men who created fake social media accounts to spy on applicants. My dad who was a triple boarded cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon would not approve of their study. Especially since he liked gardening in a speedo. Women in medicine: whether you’re a nurse, medical student, resident, an attending, post your favorite bikini pic/dress pic/halloween pic/anything today and tag me, and #medbikini . We have to drown out the sexism in medicine and keep it moving. It’s 2020 people. Sexism is cancelled.

A post shared by Dr. Candice 👙 Myhre (@drcandysurfvival) on Jul 26, 2020 at 12:26am PDT

Dr. Candice Myhre shared these graphic photos to explain how she literally saved someone's life while wearing a bikini. "Dr. Bikini will save your life in the middle of the ocean when you get hit by a boat," she writes. She was able to stabilize this man in an hour, have him flown to a hospital, order and interpret numerous tests, suture his wounds, splint his bone fractures, and more. All while wearing a bikini.

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"NEWSFLASH," she writes, "FEMALE DOCTORS CAN WEAR WHATEVER THEY WANT. Female doctors, nurses, NPs/PAs, all healthcare professionals — we can wear a bikini, a dress, or we can wear scrubs. This does not change how good we are at being a healthcare provider. We can wear WHATEVER we want on our free time, and still save your life."

She explains, "In this ridiculous article published in a well respected medical journal, the vascular surgery authors sought out to determine how many vascular surgeons had participated in what they state is 'inappropriate social media behavior,' which they defined as FEMALES IN BIKINIS — BUT GET THIS: NOT MEN IN BATHING SUITS."

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View this post on Instagram

Um artigo de 2019 "Prevalence of unprofessional media content among young vascular surgeons" julgou, pra mim não tem outra palavra melhor que essa, perfis pessoais de cirurgiões vasculares recém formados, avaliando conteúdos que, pra eles, seriam antiprofissionais, como fotos segurando ou consumindo bebidas alcoólicas, com vestuários "inapropriados", uso de palavrões, etc. Assim, criou-se o movimento de protesto #medbikini que eu jamais poderia deixar de fazer parte. Essa questão desde que entrei na faculdade me incomodava e me fazia pensar muito sobre meu futuro e de como as pessoas iriam me ver como profissional da área da Nutrição (um mundo ainda muito difícil para mulheres). É muito triste ser mais uma a ter que vir aqui e tentar fazer entender que somos humanos, que também bebemos bebidas alcoólicas, que também vamos a praia, a festas, que também temos direito de nos divertir e de compartilhar esses momentos num perfil pessoal, como qualquer outra pessoa, sem sermos julgados por isso. Não somos rótulos nem tabelas nutricionais, de maneira alguma, essas coisas nos diminui como profissionais. Quer saber sobre o trabalho de alguém? Vá ao perfil PROFISSIONAL dela, converse com outros pacientes ou clientes, mas jamais julgue um profissional pelo seu perfil pessoal levando em conta essas coisas tão irrelevantes. O que faz um profissional nunca será o biquíni ou sunga que usou na praia ou o whisky, cerveja, vinho que bebeu no jantar ou a festa do último fim de semana que foi e, sim, todos os anos de muito estudo, dedicação e sua ética profissional. Alguém pode até achar que ter fotos de biquíni torne um profissional menos capacitado, mas é um #machismo que deveria ser superado e isso vale para qualquer área. Somos Livres!💓🥰😘

A post shared by VANESSA SANTOS 🅰️➕ (@vanessasantos_nutri) on Jul 30, 2020 at 7:35am PDT

Londyn Robinson, a med student and the creator of the #MedBikini hashtag, wrote that she has heard stories already of schools and residency programs chastising their female students and employees for posting bikini pictures, clearly missing the entire point of the effort. 

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She also acknowledges that the issue of misogyny in the medical field is many-pronged and that female BIPOC health care professionals face many more accusations of "unprofessionalism" for innocuous things like their hairstyles. "We have a lot of work to do here in so many ways to combat the patriarchal ideals that comprise medical 'professionalism,'" she wrote on Twitter. "It goes far beyond a hashtag, my friends, clearly." 

I have confirmed that #MedBikini has already resulted in people’s schools and residency programs being contacted.

It’s not irony that someone posting in swimwear to protest of one of the most misogynistic & unethical articles is scoffed at. It is peak patriarchy.
A THREAD.

— Londyn Robinson (Rheuminate) (@londyloo) July 29, 2020
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The authors of the study have apologized and the paper has been retracted. In a statement on Twitter, the editors of the Journal of Vascular Surgery wrote, "Although the editors of JVS believe that the authors of this paper were attempting to advise young vascular surgeons about the risks of social media, the review process failed to identify the errors in the design of the study with regards to conscious and unconscious bias..."

It concludes, "We offer an apology to every person who has communicated the sadness, anger and disappointment caused by this article. We have received an outpouring of constructive commentary on this matter, and we intend to take each point seriously and take resolute steps to improve our review process and increase diversity of our editorial boards." The letter is signed by the editors of JVS, both male doctors named Peter.

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