Ravandur Akshay, Chan Wang Pong, Slanetz Priscilla J
Department of Radiology, Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Radiology, Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Acad Radiol. 2025 Jul 9. doi: 10.1016/j.acra.2025.06.039.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: In recent years, medical residents across the United States have been seeking to unionize with the goal of increasing compensation and improving work conditions. The impact on resident education and the administration of such programs is not well understood. We undertook this study to investigate radiology program directors' views about resident unionization.
A 24-item IRB-approved survey was disseminated by email to members of the Association for Program Directors in Radiology (APDR) in August 2023. Members were asked questions about individual demographics, program characteristics, and Likert-scale questions about unionization and its potential impact on resident education. Subgroup analysis was conducted using ordinal regression.
63 of 247 active members completed the survey, yielding a 26% response rate. Of the respondents, 31 (49%) identified as female, 37 (59%) as White, and 48 (76%) as non-Hispanic. 49 respondents (78%) identified themselves as program directors. The mean reported program size was 29 residents. 52 (83%) respondents identified their training site as an academic program, and 49 (78%) stated their program is located in an urban setting. 45 (71%) reported that trainees in their program were not unionized. Large majorities reported agreement that unions make their job more difficult (79%), that unions interfere with their ability to remediate a struggling resident (71%), and that unions change how they perform their roles (71%). Additionally, most respondents believed that unions have a positive impact on the ability of residents to make their voices heard (65%), and on resident benefits (65%). Slight majorities believed unions have a positive impact on resident salaries (57%), but negative impacts on the ability to foster resident-faculty relationships (59%) and residents' willingness to accept constructive feedback (59%).
This survey study suggests that most radiology program directors view resident unionization as problematic, with concerns including the ability of trainees to be accepting of constructive feedback, the ability to remediate an underperforming resident, and the ability to foster trainee and faculty relationships. They believe that resident well-being and educational quality are not affected by unionization, but that resident compensation, benefits, and potential for advocacy do improve when unions exist.
背景/目的:近年来,美国各地的住院医师一直寻求组建工会,以提高薪酬并改善工作条件。目前尚不清楚这对住院医师教育及此类项目的管理会产生何种影响。我们开展这项研究,旨在调查放射科项目主任对住院医师组建工会的看法。
2023年8月,通过电子邮件向放射科项目主任协会(APDR)成员发放了一份经机构审查委员会批准的包含24个条目的调查问卷。问卷询问了成员的个人人口统计学信息、项目特征,以及关于组建工会及其对住院医师教育潜在影响的李克特量表问题。使用有序回归进行亚组分析。
247名活跃成员中有63人完成了调查,回复率为26%。在受访者中,31人(49%)为女性,37人(59%)为白人,48人(%)为非西班牙裔。49名受访者(78%)称自己为项目主任。报告的项目平均规模为29名住院医师。52名(83%)受访者将其培训地点确定为学术项目,49名(78%)表示其项目位于城市环境中。45名(71%)报告称其项目中的实习生未组建工会。绝大多数受访者表示同意工会使他们的工作更困难(79%)、工会干扰他们纠正表现不佳的住院医师的能力(71%),以及工会改变他们履行职责的方式(71%)。此外,大多数受访者认为工会对住院医师表达意见的能力(65%)和住院医师福利(65%)有积极影响。略多数人认为工会对住院医师工资有积极影响(57%),但对培养住院医师与教员关系的能力有负面影响(59%),对住院医师接受建设性反馈的意愿也有负面影响(59%)。
这项调查研究表明,大多数放射科项目主任认为住院医师组建工会存在问题,担忧包括实习生接受建设性反馈的能力、纠正表现不佳的住院医师的能力,以及培养实习生与教员关系的能力。他们认为住院医师的幸福感和教育质量不受组建工会的影响,但工会存在时,住院医师的薪酬、福利和维权潜力确实会得到改善。