Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Biostatistics & Bioinformatics, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Teach Learn Med. 2024 Jan-Mar;36(1):43-52. doi: 10.1080/10401334.2022.2141750. Epub 2022 Nov 12.
Balancing the demands of medical training and parenthood is challenging. We explored perceptions of programmatic support, parental leave, breastfeeding, and self-reported biggest challenges among a large cohort of physician mothers in a variety of medical specialties and across the stage of training when they had their first child. Our goal was to inform strategies to help improve the physician parent experience. This cross-sectional, observational survey study was performed using a convenience sample from an online physician-mom support group from January to February 2018. Descriptive statistics and bivariate analyses were used to report results and examine relationships between career stage at first child and outcome variables. Responses to the open-ended question, "What is your biggest challenge as a physician mom?" were qualitatively analyzed. The survey received 896 complete responses. The most common specialties were obstetrics and gynecology (25.3%), pediatrics (19.9%), internal medicine or medicine/pediatrics (17.1%), and family medicine (10.2%). The majority of participants (63.9%) had their first child during medical training, including medical school (14.3%), residency (35.8%) or fellowship (13.6%). Medical students were less likely to perceive programmatic support than residents or fellows (44.1% vs. 63.1% vs. 62.3%, respectively), and only 19.9% of participants who became parents during medical training reported having a clear and adequate parental leave policy. Nearly 70% of participants breastfed for six months or more, with no statistical differences across career stage. Most participants (57.6%) delayed child-bearing for one or more reasons, with 32.3% delaying to complete training. The most common codes applied to responses for 'biggest challenges as a physician mom' were insufficient time, lack of work-life balance, missing out, and over-expectation. Physician mothers, particularly those who had their first child during training, continue to struggle with support from training programs, finding work-life balance, and feelings of inadequacy. Interventions such as clear and adequate leave policies, program-sponsored or onsite childcare and improved programmatic support of breastfeeding and pumping may help to ameliorate the challenges described by our participants.
平衡医学培训和育儿的需求具有挑战性。我们探讨了在一个大型医学专业医生母亲队列中,对项目支持、育儿假、母乳喂养以及自我报告的最大挑战的看法,这些母亲处于培训的各个阶段,并且在她们生育第一个孩子时。我们的目标是为帮助改善医生父母的体验提供策略。这项横断面、观察性调查研究使用了 2018 年 1 月至 2 月期间来自一个在线医生妈妈支持小组的便利样本进行。使用描述性统计和双变量分析来报告结果,并检查第一个孩子时的职业阶段与结果变量之间的关系。对“作为医生妈妈,您最大的挑战是什么?”这一开放式问题的回答进行了定性分析。该调查共收到 896 份完整回复。最常见的专业是妇产科(25.3%)、儿科(19.9%)、内科或内科/儿科(17.1%)和家庭医学(10.2%)。大多数参与者(63.9%)在医学培训期间生育了第一个孩子,包括医学生(14.3%)、住院医师(35.8%)或研究员(13.6%)。医学生比住院医师或研究员更不容易感受到项目支持(分别为 44.1%、63.1%和 62.3%),并且只有 19.9%在医学培训期间成为父母的参与者报告说有明确和足够的育儿假政策。近 70%的参与者母乳喂养了六个月或更长时间,在职业阶段没有统计学差异。大多数参与者(57.6%)出于一个或多个原因推迟生育,其中 32.3%推迟到完成培训。应用于“作为医生妈妈最大的挑战”回复的最常见代码是时间不足、工作与生活不平衡、错过和期望过高。医生母亲,尤其是那些在培训期间生育第一个孩子的母亲,继续在培训计划、寻找工作与生活平衡以及缺乏能力方面面临支持方面的困难。明确和足够的休假政策、由项目赞助或现场的儿童保育以及改善对母乳喂养和泵奶的项目支持等干预措施,可能有助于缓解我们的参与者所描述的挑战。