News story

Minister meets leading researchers in women’s health and calls for more women working in STEM

Today (Monday 6 March) the Women’s and Health Minister, Maria Caulfield met leading researchers and discussed their work to improve health outcomes for women and babies, and the importance of women working in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and maths).

This was published under the 2022 to 2024 Sunak Conservative government
Photo of Minister for Women, Maria Caulfield, speaking with members of University College London Hospital’s maternity team in a hospital corridor. All figures in the photo wear a mask.
  • Women’s and Health Minister visits the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Wing at UCLH – named after the first female doctor to qualify in Britain
  • Minister Caulfield says: “​​I trained as a nurse, so I know the vital importance of women getting into STEM roles”
  • Visit follows Minister setting out her priorities for the first year of the Women’s Health Strategy

At any one time there are around 1500 research studies ongoing at visited University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (UCLH), involving around 15,000 patients. The Minister visited the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Wing, which features the latest technology and facilities to maximise health positive outcomes for women and babies. She met clinicians researching women’s health, including during pregnancy, and foetal medicine for complicated pregnancies.

Although there has been a large increase in girls doing STEM A-Levels and being accepted on undergraduate degrees, in 2020 women still only made up 29.4% of the STEM workforce in the UK. There are also approximately 75,000 people - the majority of whom are women - who previously worked in STEM and are currently economically inactive due to caring responsibilities but are keen to return to work in the future.

Government is funding programmes to help increase take-up of STEM education for children, and has launched the STEM ReCharge initiative to help people who have left work for caring responsibilities back into STEM careers.

Women’s and Health Minister, Maria Caulfield said:

“For generations, women have lived with a health and care system that has mostly been designed by men, for men. We want to change this.

“​​I trained as a nurse, so I know the vital importance of women getting into STEM roles and pushing forward vital research which saves lives.

“The brilliant women I met are changing the lives of women today, and those in the future. I want to see more girls following this career path.”

Last summer, Government published its first ever Women’s Health Strategy for England. Based on a call for evidence which received 100,000 responses, the Strategy sets out 10-year ambitions for boosting the health and wellbeing of women. In January, Minister Maria Caulfield set out her eight priorities for the first year:

  • encouraging expansion of women’s health hubs
  • improving information provision on women’s health
  • supporting women’s health in the workplace
  • pregnancy loss
  • fertility
  • improving access to hormone replacement therapy
  • healthy ageing and long-term conditions
  • boosting research and evidence into women’s health

On her visit today she discussed progress on the Strategy with staff and thanked them for their work on maternal health, foetal medicine, pregnancy loss, fertility and boosting research and evidence into women’s health.

Updates to this page

Published 7 March 2023