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against the conditions in the homes in which they are kept. Once

paupers, they must accept confinement on the state’s terms because

they have no money and nowhere to go. The state’s terms all too

frequently are neglect, degradation, filth, and not infrequently outright sadism.

The nursing home population is markedly white. Blacks die

younger than whites in the United States— perhaps the result of

systematic racism, which means inadequate health care, shelter,

and money over a lifetime. Blacks alone comprise a full 11. 8 percent of the U . S. population and yet only 9 percent of the old are people of color, including Asians, Native Americans, and Hispanics. N ationally, so-called nonwhites (including blacks) comprise

only 5 percent of the nursing home population. In New Jersey, for

instance, according to The New York Times (October 21, 1979), out

of 8, 683 beds in eighty nursing homes, blacks occupied 532 and

Hispanics or “others” occupied 38 (6. 5 percent). It seems that

blacks especially are left to suffer the diseases of old age on their

own and to die on their own; and that whites are institutionally

maintained in appalling conditions— kept alive but barely. If this is

true, the social function of nursing homes becomes clearer: out of

sight, out of mind. Blacks are already invisible in ghettos— young,

middle-aged, old. Black women have been socially segregated and

marginalized all their lives. Perceptions of their suffering are easily

avoided by an already callous white-supremacist populace, the so-

called mainstream. It is white women who have become poor and

extraneous with old age; they are taken from mainstream communities where they are useless and dumped in nursing homes. It is important to keep them away from those eager, young, middle-class white women who might be demoralized at what is in store

for them once they cease to be useful. Kept in institutions until

they die as a punishment for having lived so long, for having outlived their sex-appropriate work, old white women find themselves drugged (6 . 1 prescriptions for an average patient, more than half

the patients given drugs like Thorazine and Mellaril); sick from

neglect with bedsores, urinary, eye, and ear infections; left lying in

their own filth, tied into so-called geriatric chairs or tied into bed;

sometimes not fed, not given heat, not given any nursing care;

sometimes left in burning baths (from which there have been

drownings); sometimes beaten and left with broken bones. Even in

old age, a woman had better have a man to protect her. She has

earned no place in society on her own. With a man, she will most

likely not end up in a prison for the female old. She has more social

value if she has a man, no matter how old she is—and she will also

have more money. After a lifetime of systematic economic discrimination—no pay for housekeeping, lower pay for salaried work, lower Social Security benefits, often with no rights to her husband’s pension or other benefits even after decades of marriage if he has left her—a woman alone is virtually resourceless. The euphemistically named “displaced homemaker” foreshadows the old woman who is put away.

The drugging of the predominantly female nursing home population continues in old age a pattern established with awful frequency among women: women get 60 to 80 percent of the prescriptions for mood-altering drugs (60 percent of the prescriptions for barbiturates, 67 percent for tranquilizers, and 80 percent for

amphetamines). Women are prescribed more than twice the drugs

that men are for the same psychological conditions. One study of

women in Utah, cited by Muriel Nellis in The Female Fix, “showed

that 69 percent of women over the age of thirty-four who were not

employed outside the home and who were members in good standing of the Mormon Church use minor tranquilizers. ”6 Such women are considered a high-risk group for addiction by the time

they are forty-five or fifty.

The dimensions of female drug addiction and dependency are

staggering. In 1977, 36 million women used tranquilizers; 16 million, sleeping pills; 12 million, amphetamines; and nearly 12 mil­

lion women got prescriptions for these drugs from doctors for the

first time. As N ellis, who cites these figures, * makes clear:

Those numbers do not include whole classes of prescribed pain

killers, all of which are mood altering and addictive. Nor do

they include the billions of doses dispensed to patients directly, without a prescription, in doctors’ offices, in m ilitary, public, or private hospitals, and in clinics or nursing homes. 7

According to the Food and Drug Administration, between 1977

and 1980 Valium was the most prescribed drug in the United

States.

At best it can be said that the woman’s lot in life, the female

role, necessitates a lot of medical intervention in the form of mood-

altering drugs. At worst it must be said that these drugs are prescribed to women because they are women— and because the doctors are largely men. The male doctor’s perception of the

female patient, conditioned by his belief in his own difference from

her and superiority to her, is that she is very emotional, very upset, irrational, has no sense of proportion, cannot discern what is trivial and what is important. She has no credibility as an observer

of her own condition or even as one who can report subjective

sensations or feelings with any integrity or acuity. She is overwrought not because of any objective condition in her life but because she is a woman and women get emotional and overwrought simply because that is how women are. Doctors have prescribed

tranquilizers to women for menstrual cramps, which have a physiological cause; for battery— the battered woman is handed a prescription and sent home to the batterer; for pregnancy—a woman is chem ically helped to accept an unwanted pregnancy; for many

* Testimony in 1978 by the acting director o f the National Institute on

Drug Abuse before the House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and

Control.

physiologically rooted diseases that the doctor does not care to investigate (but he would examine a man carefully, not give a tranquilizer); and for physiological and psychological conditions that result from stress caused by environmental, political, social, or

economic factors. When a man and a woman go to doctors complaining of the same symptoms, she is dismissed or handed a tranquilizer and he is examined and given tests. Hysteria means suffering of the womb. Since antiquity it has denoted biological