C.M. Cutter is assistant professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
L.A. Szczygiel is qualitative analyst, Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Acad Med. 2023 Oct 1;98(10):1173-1184. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000005283. Epub 2023 May 29.
To describe the policies, processes, and programs at U.S. medical schools to support faculty caregivers before and in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In 2021, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and founding members of the COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists (FRCS) Collaborative launched and supported the COVID-19 FRCS program to recognize medical schools and their efforts to strengthen policies, processes, and programs supporting biomedical faculty with family caregiving responsibilities in the context of COVID-19-related impacts. The authors conducted a qualitative conceptual content analysis of the deidentified, open-ended responses submitted by institutions in their applications to the COVID-19 FRCS program and summarized the reported strategies using recurring patterns and common approaches.
Fifty-four institutions applied to the COVID-19 FRCS program in 2021 and were included in this study. COVID-19-related impacts on biomedical faculty included stymied career progression and academic productivity, exacerbated career-caregiving time conflicts, adverse effects on family and personal well-being and mental health, increased financial hardships, and amplified faculty caregiver stigma. The described policies, processes, and programs to support faculty caregivers fell into 4 domains: support for dependent care, career and workplace flexibility, career development support, and institutional culture change to reduce stigma. COVID-19-related modifications spanned these domains with remote and flexible work manifesting as disruptive changes. Strategies to support women and underrepresented in medicine faculty, who bear a disproportionate burden of caregiving responsibilities, centered on career development support and institutional culture change. The projected durability of the enacted changes varied by institution and across strategies.
The COVID-19 pandemic presents a disruptive opportunity to translate lessons learned into positive change to better support faculty caregivers, particularly women and underrepresented in medicine faculty. This study's findings provide a framework to guide sustainable change to support equity, diversity, and vitality in the academic biomedical workforce.
描述美国医学院校在 COVID-19 大流行之前和期间支持教职工照顾者的政策、流程和项目。
2021 年,多茜·杜克慈善基金会和 COVID-19 保留临床科学家基金(FRCS)的创始成员发起并支持了 COVID-19 FRCS 计划,以表彰在 COVID-19 相关影响背景下,加强了支持有家庭照顾责任的生物医学教职员工的政策、流程和项目的医学院校及其努力。作者对机构在申请 COVID-19 FRCS 计划时提交的非识别、开放式回答进行了定性概念内容分析,并使用反复出现的模式和常见方法总结了报告的策略。
2021 年,有 54 所院校申请了 COVID-19 FRCS 计划,并被纳入本研究。COVID-19 对生物医学教师的影响包括阻碍职业发展和学术生产力、加剧职业-照顾时间冲突、对家庭和个人福祉和心理健康产生不利影响、增加经济困难以及加剧教师照顾者耻辱感。描述的支持教职工照顾者的政策、流程和项目分为 4 个领域:支持受抚养人护理、职业和工作场所灵活性、职业发展支持以及减少耻辱感的机构文化变革。与远程和灵活工作相关的 COVID-19 相关修改体现了颠覆性变化,跨越了这些领域。支持承担不成比例的照顾责任的女性和医学领域代表性不足的教职员工的策略侧重于职业发展支持和机构文化变革。所采取的变革的持久性因机构和策略而异。
COVID-19 大流行提供了一个具有颠覆性的机会,可以将经验教训转化为积极的变革,以更好地支持教职工照顾者,特别是女性和医学领域代表性不足的教职员工。本研究的结果为支持学术生物医学劳动力的公平、多样性和活力提供了一个可持续变革的框架。