Gender Equity in Medicine: The workforce conversation we can't afford to stop having

Key insights from Wavelength's Advancing Gender Equity webinar on retention, leadership pathways and practical change in the medical workforce. 

The conversation around gender equity in medicine is gaining momentum, and for good reason. Workforce sustainability, leadership diversity and long-term retention are challenges the sector can't afford to treat as seasonal priorities.

In our recent Advancing Gender Equity event, the Wavelength team was grateful to hear from Dr Sidney Chandrasiri, Chief Executive at the Australian Institute of Health Executives who shared firsthand insight into the barriers influencing recruitment, retention and leadership progression for women in medicine, alongside practical actions needed to drive lasting change.

A clear message emerged: gender equity is not a standalone issue. It is fundamental to workforce sustainability, leadership capability and the long-term health of the medical profession.

Gender equity and retention are closely linked

While retention pressures exist across the workforce, inequity places additional strain on women's ability to stay and progress in clinical roles.

Flexibility was repeatedly identified as one of the strongest drivers of retention for women at all career stages.

Dr Chandrasiri highlighted how flexibility in role design, working arrangements and return-to-work pathways after parental leave directly shapes whether doctors remain engaged in the workforce. Traditional 9-to-5 structures and rigid rostering models were widely seen as no longer aligned with modern medical careers.

Without flexibility built into systems, healthcare risks losing experienced clinicians altogether.

Structural barriers continue to shape leadership outcomes

We explored the systemic nature of leadership imbalance across healthcare.

Dr Chandrasiri referenced a clinical leadership team that was approximately 85 per cent male, a reflection of structural barriers rather than a lack of capable female candidates.

Assessment processes that are not bias-aware and inflexible specialty training pathways continue to limit progression, even where equity policies exist.

The discussion also highlighted the tangible impact of intentional sponsorship. Through one-on-one mentorship and active advocacy, a junior female surgeon progressed from Deputy Director to Clinical Director within eight months, becoming both the first woman and youngest person to hold the role.

The example underscored the power of sponsorship, and how uncommon structured approaches remain.

Mentorship and Sponsorship: Proven but inconsistent

Mentorship and sponsorship were consistently identified as some of the most effective levers for advancing gender equity, yet they remain largely individual-driven and inconsistently resourced.

Too often, organisations endorse equity in principle but place limits on learning opportunities, representation and progression in practice.

Systemic challenges include cultural legacy, internal resistance to change, bias within specialty college assessments and limited transparency across training and leadership pathways.

While peer networks and mentorship forums play a valuable role, the absence of formal structures, incentives and resourcing continues to limit their impact. Encouragingly, the webinar highlighted growing momentum, including the establishment of a RACMA special interest group supporting women in leadership and longer-term research partnerships aimed at structural reform.

Specialty imbalances and the role of recruitment

Dr Chandrasiri reflected on how entrenched masculine culture, long procedural hours and inflexible training pathways influence perceptions and career decisions. At the same time, she shared personal experiences of supportive teams and inclusive cultures that positively shaped confidence and progression.

Visibility, flexibility and informed conversations can meaningfully shift how under-represented specialties are perceived.

Practical solutions included building flexibility into training, funded mentorship connecting junior doctors with experienced female clinicians, and the use of case studies and discussion forums to broaden awareness of specialty pathways.

How Wavelength supports doctors beyond placement

As a specialist medical recruitment agency, our role extends beyond placement. We advocate for flexibility, guide return-to-work pathways, facilitate education-led conversations and focus on long-term career sustainability rather than short-term outcomes.

The insights Dr Chandrasiri shared reflect conversations we're having daily at Wavelength with doctors navigating career transitions, leadership decisions and evolving priorities. Meaningful progress depends on collaboration across clinicians, healthcare organisations, colleges, government and specialist recruitment partners.

Watch the webinar clip below ↓

 

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