There have been questions along this line before, so searching might help you find more info.
I agree with the previous replies -- especially Akron General (2 out of 3 interns are female this coming year) and MCV -- very actively and blatantly recruiting women during the interview.
Another one to be on the list of places to avoid is Alton Ochsner in New Orleans. They offered me an interview, but when a friend went for his interview a couple weeks before mine was scheduled, he heard them actually say that they did not want any females! I promptly cancelled my interview rather than waste my time and money. I think there are definitely programs out there like this who offer interviews to women, but do not actually want them in their program.
At least this year Penn seemed to be trying to recruit women. Michigan is also female friendly (or at least gender neutral) with a female Program Director.
Duke tried -- almost too hard if you ask me. The day I interviewed there, 11 of the 25 interviewees were girls (a very high percentage for an interview day) and they made a point of trying to have each of the girls interview with their female sports attending and during that interview she tried very hard to convince why it is OK to be a female at Duke. She was trying so hard that I don't even think she asked me a single question. Right now there is only 1 female resident out of their 40 residents, so I guess they felt that they needed to explain themselves to the girls that were interviewing. I will say, however, that a friend of mine who rotated there for a month said that it was not a female-friendly atmosphere in reality, so I'd be wary of them. I do not know who they took in terms of interns this year.
Mayo seems pretty neutral in terms of gender, not necessarily recruiting women, but certainly with no bias against them.
Harbor-UCLA gave the impression that they were looking for a woman to "replace" their only female who is graduating this year, but I don't know if there are any in their intern class. They seemed very good about treating everyone equally when I rotated there, and their female was just one of the guys.
OHSU (Portland, OR) also has several females and seems pretty much female friendly.
Maricopa in Phoenix interviewed a couple of women and have had some in the past, but I don't think they have any right now (not including incoming interns -- I don't know who they have for the next year). I felt that this was one place that made it seem like a big deal during the interview, though. In every single interview (there were like 7), my gender came up as an issue and they asked how I was going to deal with it or why I was doing it, etc. They were interviewing women, but made me wonder if they really wanted one?
Hope this helps. Feel free to send a private message if you have more questions regarding females in ortho...Good luck.
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