1. We're talking about a span of 200 or so years. There is plenty of modern medicine that is still based on now century+ old knowledge.
2. The feedback loop. If you were learning medicine in the 1950's, you were probably learning from medical texts written in the 50 or so years before that, when it's not unreasonable to think women would have been less represented. Those same doctors from the 1950's would then have been teaching the next generation of doctors, and they carried those (intentional or not) biases forward. Of course there was new information, but you don't tend to have much time to explore novel medicine when you're in medical school or residency, so by the time you can integrate the new knowledge, some biases have already set in. Repeat for a few generations, and you tend to only get a dilution of those old ideas, not a wholesale replacement of them.
3. If you've been affected by such biases as a patient, you're less likely to trust and be willing to participate with medicine, once more reinforcing the feedback loop.
I don't have any specific numbers or studies for you, but you could probably find more than a few that attest to this phenomenon. I hate to go with 'trust me bro' here, but my knowledge on this topic largely comes from knowing people that are either studying or practicing medicine currently, so it's anecdotal, but the anecdotes are from those in the field currently.
1. We're talking about a span of 200 or so years. There is plenty of modern medicine that is still based on now century+ old knowledge.
2. The feedback loop. If you were learning medicine in the 1950's, you were probably learning from medical texts written in the 50 or so years before that, when it's not unreasonable to think women would have been less represented. Those same doctors from the 1950's would then have been teaching the next generation of doctors, and they carried those (intentional or not) biases forward. Of course there was new information, but you don't tend to have much time to explore novel medicine when you're in medical school or residency, so by the time you can integrate the new knowledge, some biases have already set in. Repeat for a few generations, and you tend to only get a dilution of those old ideas, not a wholesale replacement of them.
3. If you've been affected by such biases as a patient, you're less likely to trust and be willing to participate with medicine, once more reinforcing the feedback loop.
I don't have any specific numbers or studies for you, but you could probably find more than a few that attest to this phenomenon. I hate to go with 'trust me bro' here, but my knowledge on this topic largely comes from knowing people that are either studying or practicing medicine currently, so it's anecdotal, but the anecdotes are from those in the field currently.