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National Women Physicians Day

Throughout history, trailblazing women have broken down barriers in medicine, paving the way for future generations of female healers.

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Celebrate women physicians' leadership and expertise while driving engagement for healthcare organizations, medical education providers, and professional services firms targeting female talent and retention.

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  • Share patient testimonials highlighting women physicians' clinical excellence and care coordination
  • Feature internal spotlights on women physicians' mentorship and leadership contributions to your organization
  • Launch a gratitude campaign encouraging staff and patients to recognize women physicians' behind-the-scenes work
  • Partner with medical schools or residency programs to highlight pathways for women in medicine

History

National Women Physicians Day is celebrated on February 3, the birthday of Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. Blackwell’s story has become symbolic not because it is neat and easy, but because it is full of the obstacles that shaped women’s participation in medicine for generations.

Blackwell became the first woman in the United States to earn a medical degree when she graduated from Geneva Medical College in 1849. She did not stroll into medical school with a welcome banner waiting.

She faced repeated rejections from institutions unwilling to admit a woman, and when she finally gained entry, her presence was treated by some as a novelty rather than a serious commitment to the profession. Instead of backing down, she excelled academically, graduating at the top of her class.

Even with a diploma, the barriers did not vanish. Early women physicians often struggled to find clinical training placements, hospital roles, and patients willing to trust them.

Blackwell’s career reflected that reality. She pursued additional training, navigated professional skepticism, and continued to advocate for women as legitimate medical professionals rather than exceptions.

Her impact went beyond being “first.” Blackwell helped build structures that allowed other women to practice medicine with real training and professional credibility. In 1857, she and her sister, Dr. Emily Blackwell, along with Dr. Marie Zakrzewska, founded the New York Infirmary for Women and Children.

This institution offered medical care to patients who often had limited access to services and created opportunities for women physicians to gain clinical experience at a time when traditional pathways were blocked.

Blackwell also played a role in medical education for women, supporting the development of training programs connected to the infirmary and contributing to broader efforts to improve women’s access to rigorous medical instruction.

Her work extended internationally as well, including involvement in the establishment of medical education for women in the United Kingdom.

This broader legacy is the heartbeat of National Women Physicians Day. The day recognizes not only a milestone, but also the long arc of change: from a single woman fighting for admission, to generations of women building hospitals, leading departments, publishing research, training students, and redefining what medical leadership can look like.

National Women Physicians Day was founded in 2016 by Physician Moms Group, along with Medelita, to honor Elizabeth Blackwell and the continuing contributions of women physicians.

The founding focus reflected a modern reality: women doctors today are not just proving they can do the work. They are also reshaping systems, advocating for better workplace structures, and pushing for equity in leadership, pay, and professional culture.

The day’s history sits at the intersection of celebration and realism. It recognizes progress, such as growing representation in medical schools and across specialties, while also acknowledging the ongoing challenges that many women physicians report.

Studies and professional discussions have highlighted persistent issues, including burnout, disproportionate non-clinical workload, bias in evaluations, underrepresentation in senior academic ranks, and barriers to advancement.

Honoring women physicians means appreciating not only the care they provide to patients but also the resilience and leadership required to thrive in a demanding field.

Ultimately, National Women Physicians Day is a reminder that medicine is built by people who show up when others are hurting, and that the profession is stronger when it welcomes and supports talented physicians of every gender.

The path Elizabeth Blackwell helped carve continues to expand, not as a closed chapter, but as an ongoing project that each generation of physicians helps shape.


How to celebrate

Thank a Woman Physician

A genuine “thank you” lands differently when it is specific. Women physicians often balance intense clinical workloads with responsibilities that are less visible to patients, such as reviewing lab results after hours, coordinating care with multiple specialists, teaching trainees, or handling administrative documentation. A brief note that recognizes the care and the craft can be meaningful. Some ways to make gratitude feel personal: Mention a concrete moment: a careful explanation, a calm presence during a stressful appointment, a follow-up that helped someone feel safe, or advocacy that improved access to a test or specialist.Recognize expertise, not just kindness: careful differential diagnosis, a well-explained plan, a respectful approach to consent, or the ability to translate complex medical information into plain language.Thank the team mindset: many physicians keep health systems running by mentoring others, supporting colleagues, and sharing leadership responsibilities. For workplaces, small gestures can be designed to avoid turning appreciation into a performance. A department can share a message board of patient compliments, highlight the work of women physicians across specialties, or invite staff to write short notes that are delivered privately rather than posted publicly. For patients, a card, a message through a clinic portal, or a thoughtful review that focuses on professionalism and care can help counteract the reality that women clinicians sometimes face unfair expectations about warmth, tone, or time. Gratitude also matters within families. Many women physicians have family members who see the unseen parts of the job: the studying, on-call interruptions, and the mental load of caring for people in crisis. Recognizing that effort supports the physician as a person, not just as a provider.

Make an Appointment with a Woman Physician

Choosing a physician is a personal decision, and National Women Physicians Day offers a good excuse to think intentionally about what someone values in care. Patients may look for a clinician who communicates clearly, asks good questions, and treats concerns with respect, regardless of how simple or complicated the issue seems. In many settings, patients appreciate that women physicians often emphasize communication, shared decision-making, and preventive care. Some research has suggested that patient outcomes can differ by physician gender in certain contexts, and that women physicians may spend more time with patients or follow guidelines closely. While no single trait guarantees great care, it is fair to say that many patients actively seek women physicians because they feel heard, understood, or comfortable discussing sensitive topics. If someone is exploring a new primary care clinician or specialist, a practical approach could include: Looking for a physician whose specialty matches the need: family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, emergency medicine, psychiatry, surgery, and many others.Considering the kind of relationship desired: a highly structured visit style versus a more conversational one, or a clinician known for patient education.Checking what support exists around the physician: access to nurses, care coordinators, interpreters, and appointment availability. It also helps to remember that women physicians work in every environment, from small clinics to major hospitals to academic centers. Some lead research labs, some run community health programs, and some combine clinical work with policy and public health. Making an appointment with a woman physician can be a way to support a professional pathway that still faces uneven representation in leadership roles, particularly in academic medicine and senior administrative positions. For those who already have a doctor they trust, the spirit of this idea can still apply. Patients can ask whether the clinic has women clinicians in other roles they might see for preventive care, specialty referrals, or second opinions. The goal is not to treat health care like a popularity contest but to be mindful that excellent physicians come from every background, and that broadening the search can lead to a better match.

Study to Become a Doctor

National Women Physicians Day can be especially motivating for girls and young women who are curious about medicine but unsure whether they “fit” the image of a doctor. The reality is that modern medicine needs more kinds of minds, not fewer. It needs problem-solvers who like biology and chemistry, but also communicators, educators, advocates, and ethical thinkers who can navigate uncertainty with patients. For students considering the path, the physician pipeline can feel mysterious. Breaking it into understandable steps makes it less intimidating: Explore the day-to-day work. Shadowing programs, clinic volunteering, hospital internships, or informational interviews can clarify what physicians actually do.Build a foundation in science and writing. Medicine is data-heavy, but it also relies on clear documentation and communication with patients and teams.Look for mentors. A woman physician mentor can help with practical advice about courses, applications, work-life planning, and specialty exploration.Learn about specialties early. Many students only picture one or two types of doctors. In reality, medicine includes everything from radiology to pathology to anesthesia to rehabilitation. It also helps to name the challenges honestly. Women physicians can face higher rates of burnout in some settings, and professional life can include bias, unequal expectations, and obstacles to advancement. Studying to become a doctor is not about pretending those issues do not exist. It is about joining a profession with eyes open and contributing to a healthier culture for everyone who practices within it. Celebrating the educational journey can be as simple as reading about women who changed medicine, visiting a science museum with a medical exhibit, or attending a local lecture or panel discussion on health careers. Even small actions can reinforce the message that medicine is a place where women belong, lead, and innovate. National Women Physicians Day Timeline1849Elizabeth Blackwell Becomes First Woman MD in the United StatesElizabeth Blackwell graduates from Geneva Medical College in New York, becoming the first woman in the United States to earn an M.D. degree and helping open the medical profession to women.[1]1857New York Infirmary for Women and Children OpensElizabeth Blackwell, her sister Emily Blackwell, and Marie Zakrzewska establish the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, a hospital staffed entirely by women that treats the poor and trains women physicians.[1]1859First Woman Listed on the British Medical RegisterElizabeth Blackwell becomes the first woman entered on the British Medical Register, formally qualifying her to practice medicine in the United Kingdom.[1]1868Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary FoundedElizabeth Blackwell organizes the Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary to provide formal medical education and clinical training specifically for women.[1]1874London School of Medicine for Women EstablishedElizabeth Blackwell joins Sophia Jex-Blake and others in founding the London School of Medicine for Women, the first institution in Britain created to prepare women for medical qualifications.[1]

Elizabeth Blackwell Becomes First Woman MD in the United States

Elizabeth Blackwell graduates from Geneva Medical College in New York, becoming the first woman in the United States to earn an M.D. degree and helping open the medical profession to women. [1]

New York Infirmary for Women and Children Opens

Elizabeth Blackwell, her sister Emily Blackwell, and Marie Zakrzewska establish the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, a hospital staffed entirely by women that treats the poor and trains women physicians. [1]

First Woman Listed on the British Medical Register

Elizabeth Blackwell becomes the first woman entered on the British Medical Register, formally qualifying her to practice medicine in the United Kingdom. [1]

Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary Founded

Elizabeth Blackwell organizes the Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary to provide formal medical education and clinical training specifically for women. [1]

London School of Medicine for Women Established

Elizabeth Blackwell joins Sophia Jex-Blake and others in founding the London School of Medicine for Women, the first institution in Britain created to prepare women for medical qualifications. [1]


FAQ
How has the representation of women in the physician workforce changed over time?
In the United States, the share of active physicians who are women has risen steadily over recent decades, with women now comprising more than one‑third of practicing doctors and nearly half of residents and fellows. Data from the Association of American Medical Colleges show that the absolute number of women physicians has grown substantially since the early 2000s, reflecting expanding access to medical education and training opportunities for women. [1]
What kinds of barriers have women historically faced in entering the medical profession?
Historically, women were excluded from many medical schools and professional societies, faced skepticism about their abilities, and were often denied access to clinical training sites and hospital appointments. Even after formal restrictions eased, women commonly encountered discrimination in specialty selection, limited mentorship, and fewer opportunities for research and advancement, which contributed to their underrepresentation in senior and leadership roles. [1]
What challenges do women physicians commonly report in their careers today?
Contemporary research highlights persistent gender pay gaps, underrepresentation in higher‑paying specialties and senior academic ranks, and higher rates of burnout among women physicians. Studies also describe disproportionate caregiving expectations, bias in promotion and evaluation, and experiences of harassment or discrimination as ongoing concerns that affect career satisfaction and retention. [1]
Are there notable differences in the medical specialties chosen by women and men physicians?
Workforce data show that women physicians are especially prevalent in pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, and several primary care fields, while men continue to predominate in many surgical and certain procedural specialties. These patterns have been linked in studies to factors such as role models, work‑life balance considerations, perceptions of specialty culture, and longstanding gender stereotypes. [1]
Why is leadership representation a key issue for women in medicine?
Leadership positions in medicine, such as department chair, dean, or health system executive, strongly influence hiring, promotion criteria, research priorities, and workplace culture. Analyses of academic medical centers show that women, despite being a large and growing share of the physician workforce, remain a minority in top leadership roles, raising concerns that decision‑making may not fully reflect the diversity of clinicians and patients.
How have women physicians contributed to advances in medical research and patient care?
Women physicians have played important roles in developing clinical tools, advancing understanding of conditions that disproportionately affect women, and shaping patient‑centered models of care. Historical and contemporary accounts highlight contributions to areas such as maternal and child health, cardiovascular disease in women, and community‑based primary care, helping to broaden research questions and improve the responsiveness of health systems to diverse patients. [1]