Bonnie Gregory, MD, specializes in sports medicine with an emphasis on innovative, arthroscopic procedures and complex, open surgeries of the shoulder, elbow, and knee. She treats a full spectrum of musculoskeletal injuries in athletes of all ages, with a special interest in the demands of competitive athletes. She has an active interest in clinical research and is an expert in nonsurgical management and rehabilitation of sports-related injuries. Her goal is to utilize evidence-based, individualized treatment plans to get her patients back to the activities they enjoy and prevent future injuries. Dr. Gregory is currently the team physician for the Houston Dash, a professional women’s soccer team, and for Foster High School. She also participates in the care of athletes at the University of Houston and other local high schools. Dr. Gregory is also an assistant professor in the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at McGovern Medical School at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth). Dr. Gregory received her undergraduate degree at the Duke University in North Carolina where she was a varsity rower and achieved academic All-Atlantic Coast Conference honors. She completed medical school at the University of Louisville in Kentucky where she was inducted into the Gold Humanism Honor Society. She completed her residency in Orthopaedic Surgery at the prestigious Rush University Medical Center at Chicago, followed by a fellowship in shoulder and sports medicine at Duke University in North Carolina. During her training, she had extensive hands-on experience in sports medicine treating recreational, high school, collegiate, and professional athletes. She worked with the Chicago Steel hockey team, the Joffrey Ballet in Chicago; athletic teams at Duke University and Central University in North Carolina, and Roosevelt University in Chicago, as well as local high school teams. Dr. Gregory is a member of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, the Ruth Jackson Orthopaedic Society, and the Piedmont Orthopaedic Society. She has authored many scientific articles as well as textbook chapters on topics within sports medicine, and presented her work at national meetings. She is a rising leader in orthopaedics and has completed the Feagin Leadership Program at Duke University, as well as the American Orthopaedic Association C. McCollister Evart Resident Leadership Forum and Emerging Leaders Program.