59% as of 2017.
The problem is that even women appear to show little interest in the anatomy and physiology of female sexual response. It is ironic that the best research on clitoral anatomy to date has been done by men. The female president of ABOG refuses to add it to board exams and the female president of ACOG neglects to answer any emails about this. I have tried emailing countless female OB/GYNs about this, and they mostly do not answer. Female gynecologist, Jen Gunter, discredited me on twitter. Female textbook authors ignore me or tell me they don’t have space to include this anatomy.
Meanwhile, the male dominated fields of plastic surgery and urology seem much more willing to acknowledge the need for better clitoral anatomy and an objective understanding of sexual function.
That said, medicine is very hierarchal. Only established physicians who have chosen to pursue a leadership track have any ability to change anything. Most leadership in gynecology still appears to be male, despite the 2 most influential positions being held by women.