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Woman's Hour

'Battle of the Sexes' 2025, Irish nurses, AI & age-related diseases

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 29 December 2025

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Yesterday, the women's tennis number one, Aryna Sabalenka, faced Nick Kyrgios, ranked 671st in the men's game, in a match that was dubbed the new 'Battle of the Sexes'. She lost in straight sets. The title references the 1973 game when the best women’s player in the world, Billie Jean King, beat Bobby Riggs in straight sets. But how relevant is this for the game now and what if anything has it achieved for women's sport? Clare McDonnell is joined by BBC Sport journalist Jonathan Jurejko, and Flo Clifford, Sports Reporter for the Independent.

From the very beginning of the NHS in 1948, Irish women were actively recruited to staff British hospitals. By the 1960s, there were around 30,000 Irish-born nurses - making up roughly one in eight of all nurses – yet their contribution has often gone unrecognised. A new book aims to change that. Based on dozens of interviews, it tells the story of Irish nurses in their own words. We hear from co-author of Irish Nurses in the NHS: and Oral History, Professor Louise Ryan, who spent years researching Irish migration. And from Ethel Corduff, who grew up in Tralee before coming to England to train as a nurse, a career she spent 40 years in.

We discuss the women stepping onto the dohyo - the sacred circle used for Sumo wrestling. There has been a surge of interest in the UK—so what’s drawing more women to this ancient sport? Especially as in Japan they are still banned from competing professionally. We’ll hear from British competitor Toraigh Mallon and from Lance Wicks from Southampton Sumo.

Did you manage to switch off from work over Christmas? Is your mind already turning to setting some big life goals for 2026? If you struggled to strike the right balance in 2025, we have just the thing to help you reset your relationship with work and success for the year ahead. The Woman’s Hour Guide to Life features a whole episode on ambition, burnout, and how to stay driven while also being kind to yourself. TV chef and author Lorraine Pascale and Dr Claire Ashley, the author of The Burnout Doctor, discuss.

Could AI be the answer to treating age-related diseases – or could it reinforce gender biases that sideline women’s health? Dr Carina Kern is a geneticist and biotechnology scientist who specialises in ageing. She joins Clare in the studio to discuss the potential risks and benefits of using AI in medical research and ageing.

Presenter: Clare McDonnell Producer: Kirsty Starkey

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:07.5

It's like going into an ice path with your hands as the ice.

0:10.8

In 2025, we were here for the entertainment.

0:13.8

Ellis and John.

0:14.9

Have you not considered just coffee, which is what I do?

0:17.6

Sightracked with Annie and Nick.

0:19.4

Stevie Wonder, welcome. I'm pleasure. Loyal Carnar is with us. We want to hearract with Annie and Nick. Stevie Wonder, welcome.

0:21.4

My pleasure. Loyal Carnar is with us. Want to hear all about Glastonbury. And Celebrity Traitors Uncloaked. Welcome to Uncloaked, Ireland. Oh, thanks for having me, Ed. The winner. I know, still hasn't sunk in. Get the best of 2025 with podcasts on BBC Sounds.

0:42.1

Hello, this is Claire Macdonnell and you're listening to the Women's Hour podcast.

0:44.8

Hello and welcome to Woman's Hour.

0:48.8

Now, are you thinking of taking up a new sport in the new year?

0:56.0

Well, maybe sumo wrestling wouldn't be top of your list, but after today's program, it might just be. The inaugural British Isles Sumo Championships is happening in Belfast next month and an increasing

1:01.8

number of women are taking up the sport. We're going to be speaking to one of them. So let me know

1:07.0

today if you have already dipped your toe in a male dominated sport or pastime,

1:14.0

how did you fare?

1:15.3

And what words of wisdom would you pass on to other Women's Hour listeners thinking of doing the same in 2026?

1:22.3

You can text the programme.

1:23.7

This is the number you need, 84844.

1:26.7

Text will be charged at your standard message rate.

1:29.6

On social media, we are at BBC Woman's Hour, and you can email us through our website,

1:35.3

or you can send a WhatsApp message or voice note using the number 0-3700-100-444.

1:43.8

There's also a brilliant new bookout that documents Irish nurses in the NHS and the huge

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