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University of California Press

The Weight of the White Coat

Latinos Navigating American Medicine

by Glenda M. Flores (Author)
Price: $29.95 / £25.00
Publication Date: Apr 2025
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 289
ISBN: 9780520409248
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 3 b/w illustrations, 5 tables

About the Book

Few people know much about Latina/o physicians as students, people, or workers in a high-skill occupation in the United States. The Weight of the White Coat traces the life stages that Latina/o physicians follow and the mechanisms that disadvantage or advantage them throughout their careers, from the family to the practice of medicine. Glenda M. Flores turns a careful, considered eye to this pan-ethnic group with heterogeneous characteristics in an elite profession, observing how demographic characteristics such as gender and ethnicity act like cumulative weights in their coat pockets, producing hindrances for some—thus limiting their advancement—and elevating others as they provide care in poor and wealthy communities. Here, the status of Latina/o doctors provides a unique lens for examining the polyvalent weight of physicianhood within the heterogeneous and still unsettled contours of Latinidad.

About the Author

Glenda M. Flores is Associate Professor of Chicano/Latino Studies at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Latina Teachers: Creating Careers and Guarding Culture.

Reviews

"The Weight of the White Coat sheds new light on the complexity of Latina/o doctors' experiences of professional success and discrimination in medicine. It is one of the most thorough investigations of all the intersections that shape the journey of Latinas and Latinos into medical school and the profession. Its scope is remarkable."—Monisha Das Gupta, author of All of Us or None: Migrant Organizing in an Era of Deportation and Dispossession

"This compelling book offers a detailed analysis of the factors influencing the paths and experiences of Latina/o doctors. Flores offers a crucial corrective to perceptions of Latina/o homogeneity through her consideration of differing positionalities by class, gender, color, and nationality. A complex and engaging read."—Gilda L. Ochoa, author of Academic Profiling: Latinos, Asian Americans, and the Achievement Gap