More women are choosing to continue their careers in digital health compared to 2021 according to a new report published by RMIT University and partners, Telstra Health, Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre Limited (DHCRC), RMIT University, The University of Melbourne, the Department of Health and Aged Care, Australasian Institute of Digital Health, Australian Library and Information Association Health Libraries Australia, and the Health Information Management Association of Australia.

The Gender Diversity in Australia’s Digital Health Workforce 2024 Report on the 2023 census on gender diversity aims to address the lack of research and data on this topic in digital health, both in Australia and internationally.  

The survey which informed the report was completed anonymously by close to 500 people who work in the digital health sector. The report showed:

  • 10 per cent more women that have more than 10 years’ digital health experience compared to three years ago 
  • Over 97% of women believe progress and change needs to be made in order to reach gender equity 
  • 34 per cent of women were managing others compared to 13 per cent of men 
  • 55 per cent of women felt that they needed to prove themselves in the workplace compared to 50 per cent of men. 
Download the report

Commenting on the report, Kerryn Butler-Henderson, RMIT said “When we look at the data from the past three censuses over the last five years, we see a growing pattern across the workforce. The more traditional roles that were once paper focused, such as health librarians and clinical coders, are held by older women, whereas the roles that have emerged over the past two decades, such as informatics, technology, and data science roles, are predominantly held by younger men. This is a concerning trend seen in other fields that we need to change today.”

Kathleen Gray, The University of Melbourne said “Improving gender equity in the digital health workforce can have an important impact on person-centred care. There is a documented digital health gender gap producing inequitable and suboptimal experiences for women in their roles as patients and carers: digital health tools may not address their needs; digital access to personal health data may make them vulnerable; health app designs and decision-support algorithms may be biased against them (Figueroa et al. 2021). Elevating the status of women in digital health management, investment, research and innovation roles can bring greater sensitivity to these issues. However, achieving this workforce reform has to build on a broad base of women with secure work in specialist digital health roles. The census data can help to assess, target and overcome obstacles to women’s representation in the digital health workforce.”

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