Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration

Gender disparity persists in sports and exercise medicine (SEM), with women comprising only 27% of the faculty of SEM (FSEM) membership. While existing literature explores the barriers women face in progressing within SEM, less attention has been given to when and why female medical students disenga...

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Main Authors: Daniel Fitzpatrick, Megan Ormond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-08-01
Series:BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine
Online Access:https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/11/3/e002657.full
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author Daniel Fitzpatrick
Megan Ormond
author_facet Daniel Fitzpatrick
Megan Ormond
author_sort Daniel Fitzpatrick
collection DOAJ
description Gender disparity persists in sports and exercise medicine (SEM), with women comprising only 27% of the faculty of SEM (FSEM) membership. While existing literature explores the barriers women face in progressing within SEM, less attention has been given to when and why female medical students disengage from the specialty pathway. This viewpoint article analyses data from the National Undergraduate SEM Society (USEMS), University SEM Committees and National Health Service England to track gender differences at various career stages. FSEM membership data was also reviewed to assess representation at the consultant level. Over the past 5 years, 46.8% of USEMS members and 48.6% of University SEM Committee members have been women. In contrast, at the Foundation doctor level, female USEMS membership figures drop to 24% and only 20.1% of SEM training applications submitted between 2021 and 2023 were by women. Despite strong engagement at the undergraduate level, few women pursue specialty SEM training, indicating that external barriers may be discouraging them from continuing. More research is needed to understand the specific factors leading to this disengagement so that appropriate steps can be taken to prevent it.
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spelling doaj-art-57f47f9a7e754ee796efb20379ff9d8d2025-08-22T11:25:14ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine2055-76472025-08-0111310.1136/bmjsem-2025-002657Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspirationDaniel Fitzpatrick0Megan Ormond1Heat Illness Advisory Group, London, UK1 Ashford and St Peter’s Hospitals NHS Trust, Chertsey, UKGender disparity persists in sports and exercise medicine (SEM), with women comprising only 27% of the faculty of SEM (FSEM) membership. While existing literature explores the barriers women face in progressing within SEM, less attention has been given to when and why female medical students disengage from the specialty pathway. This viewpoint article analyses data from the National Undergraduate SEM Society (USEMS), University SEM Committees and National Health Service England to track gender differences at various career stages. FSEM membership data was also reviewed to assess representation at the consultant level. Over the past 5 years, 46.8% of USEMS members and 48.6% of University SEM Committee members have been women. In contrast, at the Foundation doctor level, female USEMS membership figures drop to 24% and only 20.1% of SEM training applications submitted between 2021 and 2023 were by women. Despite strong engagement at the undergraduate level, few women pursue specialty SEM training, indicating that external barriers may be discouraging them from continuing. More research is needed to understand the specific factors leading to this disengagement so that appropriate steps can be taken to prevent it.https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/11/3/e002657.full
spellingShingle Daniel Fitzpatrick
Megan Ormond
Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine
title Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
title_full Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
title_fullStr Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
title_full_unstemmed Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
title_short Gender parity in sports medicine; present imperative not future aspiration
title_sort gender parity in sports medicine present imperative not future aspiration
url https://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/11/3/e002657.full
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AT meganormond genderparityinsportsmedicinepresentimperativenotfutureaspiration