Ghatan Christine E, Fassiotto Magali, Jacobsen Joyce P, Sze Daniel Y, Kothary Nishita
Department of Radiology, University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Division of Interventional Radiology, 300 Pasteur Drive, H3630, Stanford, CA 94305-5642; Department of Radiology, and Office of Faculty Development and Diversity, Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, H3630, Stanford, CA 94305-5642.
J Vasc Interv Radiol. 2016 Jul;27(7):1013-1020.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jvir.2016.03.040. Epub 2016 May 26.
To assess attitudes of interventional radiologists toward occupational ionizing radiation exposure in pregnancy and to survey practice patterns and outcomes.
A 34-question anonymous online survey on attitudes and work practices toward interventional radiologists who worked during pregnancy was sent to active SIR members, including 582 women.
There were 534 (10%) respondents, including 142 women and 363 men. Among respondents, men were statistically older than women (P < .001) and had practiced interventional radiology (IR) longer (P < .001). Of female interventional radiologists, 55% had worked during pregnancy and reported no specific mutagenic events in their offspring. Spontaneous abortions (11%) and use of reproductive technology (17%) matched that of women with similar age and socioeconomic background. Although more women changed their work practice because of concerns of occupational exposure than men (23% vs 13%), this change was largely limited to the duration of a pregnancy. Among pregnant interventional radiologists, 4 (6%) completely abstained from performing fluoroscopically guided interventions (FGIs), whereas 31 (46%) continued to spend > 80% of their work week doing FGIs with additional protection. Perceptions of impact of pregnancy on daytime work redistribution varied significantly with gender (P < .001); however, perceptions regarding impact of pregnancy on on-call hours, distribution of complex cases, and need to hire for temporary coverage were similar between the genders.
Most pregnant interventional radiologists continue to practice IR while pregnant. Pregnancy and fetal outcomes parallel that of the general population when matched for demographics. However, perceptions of impact of pregnancy on work lives of colleagues vary notably.
评估介入放射科医生对孕期职业性电离辐射暴露的态度,并调查其执业模式及结果。
向介入放射学会(SIR)的活跃成员发送了一份包含34个问题的匿名在线调查问卷,内容涉及对孕期仍从事介入放射工作的医生的态度和工作习惯,其中包括582名女性成员。
共有534名(10%)受访者,其中包括142名女性和363名男性。在受访者中,男性在统计学上比女性年龄更大(P <.001),且从事介入放射学(IR)的时间更长(P <.001)。在女性介入放射科医生中,55%在孕期仍继续工作,且其后代未出现特定的致突变事件。自然流产率(11%)和生殖技术使用率(17%)与年龄和社会经济背景相似的女性相当。尽管因担心职业暴露而改变工作习惯的女性比男性更多(23%对13%),但这种改变主要局限于孕期。在怀孕的介入放射科医生中,4名(6%)完全避免进行透视引导介入操作(FGIs),而31名(46%)在采取额外防护措施的情况下,仍继续将超过80%的工作周时间用于FGIs操作。关于孕期对日间工作重新分配影响的认知,不同性别之间存在显著差异(P <.001);然而,对于孕期对随叫随到时间、复杂病例分配以及临时招聘需求的影响,不同性别之间的认知相似。
大多数怀孕的介入放射科医生在孕期仍继续从事介入放射工作。在人口统计学特征匹配的情况下,怀孕情况和胎儿结局与普通人群相似。然而,不同性别对孕期对同事工作生活影响的认知存在显著差异。