May 2023 Br J Cardiol 2023;30:51–5 doi:10.5837/bjc.2023.013
Clara Portwood
Introduction Miss Portwood, Medical Student In 2021, doctors identifying as women represented 16% of consultants and 29% of cardiology trainees in the UK.1 While the number of women training in cardiology has increased from 17% since 2003,2 cardiology remains an outlier among medical specialties. Women have outnumbered men entering medical school since 1997,3 39% of medical consultants are women, and gender representation in trainees of most other medical specialties is approaching parity.1 It has been proposed that cardiology will ‘catch up’ with other specialties, however, only 27% of female medical graduates declared an interest in car
November 2022 Br J Cardiol 2022;29:134–6
Alexandra Abel
100 years in cardiology Born in 1922 and originally known as “The Cardiac Club”, the British Cardiovascular Society (BCS) is the world’s oldest professional cardiac society. To celebrate “100 years in cardiology”, five centenary lectures were given at BCS 2022 by world-renowned speakers (… three of whom were called John): Professor John Camm (heart rhythm); Professor Barbara Casadei (cardiovascular research in the UK); Professor John McMurray: (heart failure); Professor John Deanfield (coronary artery disease); and Professor Catherine Otto (cardiac imaging). The centenary lectures charted the impressive evolution of cardiovascular
You need to be a member to print this page.
Find out more about our membership benefits
You need to be a member to download PDF's.
Find out more about our membership benefits