Department of Surgery, Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.
Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida.
J Surg Res. 2024 Jul;299:9-16. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2024.03.002. Epub 2024 Apr 26.
The perceptions of teaching faculty toward pregnant general surgery residents have been overlooked despite the daily interactions amongst these groups.
A 32-question survey designed to measure general surgery teaching faculty perceptions toward pregnant residents was distributed electronically from March 2022 to April 2022 to general surgery teaching faculty in the United States. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize responses and differences in perceptions, and qualitative analysis identified recurring themes from free-text responses.
Among 163 respondents included in the final analysis, 58.5% were male and 41.5% were female. Despite 99.4% of surgeons feeling comfortable if a resident told them they were pregnant, 22.4% of surgeons disagreed that their institutions have supportive cultures toward pregnancy. Almost half (45.4%) have witnessed negative comments about pregnant residents and half (50.3%) believe that pregnant surgical residents are discriminated against by their coresidents. Nearly two-thirds of surgeons (64.8%) believe that someone should have a child whenever they wish during training. Given recent reports, 80.2% of surgeons recognized that female surgeons have increased risks of infertility and pregnancy complications. Recurring themes of normalizing pregnancy, improving policies, and creating a culture change were expressed.
In this national survey, although there appears to be positive perceptions of pregnancy in surgical training amongst those surveyed, there is acknowledged necessity of further normalizing pregnancy and improving policies to better support pregnant residents. These data provide further evidence that though perceptions may be improving, changes are still needed to better support pregnancy during training.
尽管这些群体之间每天都有互动,但人们忽视了教学人员对怀孕普外科住院医师的看法。
我们设计了一份包含 32 个问题的调查问卷,旨在衡量普外科教学人员对怀孕住院医师的看法,并于 2022 年 3 月至 2022 年 4 月期间向美国的普外科教学人员发送了电子调查问卷。我们使用描述性统计数据来描述反应和看法上的差异,并通过定性分析从自由文本回复中确定反复出现的主题。
在最终分析的 163 名受访者中,58.5%为男性,41.5%为女性。尽管 99.4%的外科医生对住院医师告知他们怀孕的情况感到放心,但仍有 22.4%的外科医生不同意他们的机构对怀孕有支持性的文化。近一半(45.4%)的人目睹过对怀孕住院医师的负面评论,一半(50.3%)的人认为怀孕的外科住院医师受到他们的同科室住院医师的歧视。近三分之二(64.8%)的外科医生认为在培训期间,某人应该在他们希望的时候生孩子。鉴于最近的报告,80.2%的外科医生认识到女性外科医生在不孕和妊娠并发症方面的风险增加。表达了使怀孕正常化、改进政策和创造文化变革的反复出现的主题。
在这项全国性调查中,尽管调查对象对外科培训中的怀孕似乎有积极的看法,但人们认识到需要进一步使怀孕正常化并改进政策,以更好地支持怀孕的住院医师。这些数据进一步证明,尽管看法可能在改善,但仍需要做出改变,以更好地支持培训期间的怀孕。