W21C Research and Innovation Centre, O'Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Dec;36(12):3697-3703. doi: 10.1007/s11606-021-06835-0. Epub 2021 May 6.
Some gender-based disparities in medicine may relate to pregnancy and parenthood. An understanding of the challenges faced by pregnant physicians and physician parents is needed to design policies and interventions to reduce these disparities.
Our objective was to characterize work-related barriers related to pregnancy and parenthood described by physicians.
We performed framework analysis of qualitative data collected through individual, semi-structured interviews between May and October 2018. Data related to pregnancy or parenthood were organized chronologically to understand barriers throughout the process of pregnancy, planning a parental leave, taking a parental leave, returning from parental leave, and parenting as a physician.
Physician faculty members of all genders, including parents and non-parents, from a single department at a large academic medical school in Canada were invited to participate in a department-wide study broadly exploring gender equity.
Thematic analysis guided by constructivism.
Twenty-eight physicians were interviewed (7.2% of eligible physicians), including 22 women and 6 men, of which 18 were parents (15 mothers and 3 fathers). Common barriers included a lack of systems-level guidelines for pregnancy and parental leave, inconsistent workplace accommodations for pregnant physicians, a lack of guidance and support for planning parental leaves, and difficulties obtaining clinical coverage for parental leave. Without systems-level guidance, participants had to individually navigate challenges and resolve these difficulties, including negotiating with their leadership for benefits. This led to stress, wasted time and effort, and raised questions about fairness within the department.
Physician parents face unique challenges navigating institutional policies as well as planning and taking parental leave. Systems-level interventions such as policies for pregnancy, parental leave, and return to work are needed to address barriers experienced by physician parents.
医学领域的一些性别差异可能与怀孕和育儿有关。为了制定减少这些差异的政策和干预措施,需要了解怀孕医生和医生父母所面临的挑战。
我们的目的是描述医生描述的与怀孕和育儿相关的工作相关障碍。
我们对 2018 年 5 月至 10 月期间通过个人、半结构化访谈收集的定性数据进行了框架分析。与怀孕或育儿相关的数据按时间顺序组织,以了解整个怀孕过程、计划育儿假、休育儿假、休完育儿假返回工作岗位以及作为医生育儿的障碍。
来自加拿大一所大型学术医学院的单一系的所有性别的医生教职员工,包括父母和非父母,受邀参加一项广泛探索性别平等的系内研究。
以建构主义为指导的主题分析。
共采访了 28 名医生(符合条件的医生的 7.2%),包括 22 名女性和 6 名男性,其中 18 名是父母(15 名母亲和 3 名父亲)。常见的障碍包括缺乏妊娠和育儿假的系统级指导方针、为怀孕医生提供的工作场所住宿不一致、缺乏规划育儿假的指导和支持,以及在育儿假期间获得临床覆盖的困难。由于缺乏系统级指导,参与者不得不单独应对挑战并解决这些困难,包括与他们的领导层协商福利。这导致了压力、浪费时间和精力,并对部门内部的公平性提出了质疑。
医生父母在驾驭机构政策以及规划和休育儿假方面面临独特的挑战。需要系统级干预措施,如妊娠、育儿假和重返工作岗位政策,以解决医生父母所面临的障碍。