Why representation matters

Ellie Lovegrove, is a physiotherapist at Barts Health NHS Trust. Ellie hopes visibility in the workplace encourages members of the transgender community to seek the healthcare that they need

FL Feb 2025 Viewpoint image of Ellie Lovegrove, (she/her/they/them) who is a London-based physiotherapist and a member of the CSP’s LGBTQIA+ Network
Ellie Lovegrove, (she/her/they/them) who is a London-based physiotherapist and a member of the CSP’s LGBTQIA+ Network

We all know I look fabulous in men’s clothes. Let’s get that over with. But for most of the day, my gender identity is not my defining feature. As a newly qualified physiotherapist, I feel more consumed by my clinical reasoning, being a good team-mate, and whether I can see my caseload in time to beat the queue for the microwave.

I wear a men’s T-shirt under my polo, men’s chinos, and there are moments when I hate having a female body. It doesn’t align. 

It provokes a stress, a heady mix of claustrophobia, anger, and frustration. 

Equally, there are times when I am less bothered, and moments where I push all gendered thoughts to one side. I have more than 30 years of practice at this – being genderqueer is not a fad, a sudden choice, or a political statement. 

Perhaps five-year-old me just didn’t have the words to express what was going on, especially against schoolteacher and familial disapproval. 

As for my teens and 20s, I suppressed my masculinity. Long hair, make-up, dresses...until the battle ended with a skin-fade haircut. The relief was immediate, and male clothing followed. However, the journey to alignment has been slow, and not without rejection, comments and questions. 

Right now, I am privileged to be part of a fabulously supportive and accepting team. On my first day, a colleague gave me a Progress Pride flag pin, and it felt fantastic to represent our community – our stories, struggles, and our courage to live authentically. One patient, who identified as non-binary, said that they felt relieved to see the badge on my lanyard, and upon telling my colleague, he said: ‘When you feel vulnerable, you look for those signs – to check for safety.’

I hope that our visibility encourages members of the transgender community to seek the healthcare that they need. 

Because we have always been here. And for genderqueer, non-binary and transgender people in our care, I want to say you are safe, you are accepted, you are represented, and we stand with you, both as individuals and as part of the CSP LGBTQIA+ network.   

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