
Often associated with high performance, sports medicine is much more than simply supporting athletes: it questions our approach to preventing, diagnosing, and treating bodies in motion.
What is sports medicine?
Sports medicine put to the test of gender

But this discipline is still marked by structural biases. The majority of scientific research used to establish sports medical recommendations is based on male data, without sufficient consideration of female hormonal or physiological specificities, which affects the medical monitoring of athletes.
While medicine is increasingly integrating the issue of gender, it remains necessary to address gender disparities in sports medicine, which is still largely male-dominated. Indeed, female practitioners would be more sensitive to these issues and would better take into account the female specificities of their patients[1]. They would therefore be in a position to evolve the discipline towards a more respectful and inclusive approach to athletes’ body and mind.
Marion Delespierre – Running, Healing, Winning
From childhood, she was driven by a dual attraction: swimming on one side, medicine on the other. Very early on, the desire to combine sports and health became evident. But the constraints of medical internship, with schedules often incompatible with those of municipal pools, pushed her to abandon the pool for trails. She traded pool tiles for rugged trail paths. What “was just an adjustment became a revelation: she quickly went from simple pleasure to competition, until” reaching the highest steps of the world podium.
To discover Marion Delespierre’s inspiring journey and understand how she balances her two vocations, listen to this podcast:
Written by Nastia and edited by Intan
Sources:
[1] Lurie N, Slater J, McGovern P, Ekstrum J, Quam L, Margolis K. Preventive care for women. Does the sex of the physician matter?. N Engl J Med. 1993;329(7):478-482. doi:10.1056/NEJM199308123290707
[2] Lurie N, Slater J, McGovern P, Ekstrum J, Quam L, Margolis K. Preventive care for women. Does the sex of the physician matter?. N Engl J Med. 1993;329(7):478-482. doi:10.1056/NEJM199308123290707