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医学住院医师和研究员成为父母的道路:休假政策对俄勒冈健康与科学大学实习医生父母的影响。

Path to parenthood for medical residents and fellows: the impact of leave policies on parent trainees at Oregon Health and Science University.

作者信息

Lenne Eline, Soller Marie, Lashen Gillian, Dukhovny Stephanie, Reimer Alinda, Klawetter Susanne, Carter Emily

机构信息

School of Social Work, Portland State University, 1800 SW 6th Ave, Portland, OR 97201, United States.

Department of Psychiatry, Oregon Health and Science University, School of Medicine, 3181 Sam Jackson Park Rd., Portland, OR 97239, United States.

出版信息

Postgrad Med J. 2025 Sep 2. doi: 10.1093/postmj/qgaf124.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Residents and fellows in graduate medical education (GME) programs across the USA often complete training during childbearing years, presenting challenges for pregnant and parenting trainees balancing work and family. Institutional policies must better support these trainees. Previous studies show supported trainees experience reduced burnout, better health, and improved patient outcomes.

OBJECTIVE

This study assessed the experiences and unmet needs of pregnant and parenting GME trainees and presents their recommendations for improved support.

METHODS

Using a sequential explanatory mixed-methods design, we examined the unmet needs and challenges of pregnant and parenting trainees, and their recommendations for improvement. We distributed a survey to all GME trainees across all specialties at Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) in 2023. Ninety-eight out of 160 eligible participants completed the survey (~60% response rate).

RESULTS

Despite existing policies, trainees at Oregon Health and Science University faced persistent challenges. We identified three themes and related recommendations from our analysis of quantitative and open-ended survey data: (1) Leave and coverage-barriers to adequate parental leave and inconsistent enforcement of GME policies; [2] Lactation-meeting breast/chest-feeding goals required immense effort due to limited resources; and [3] Health and childcare-existing policies negatively impacted fertility, childcare access, and mental health. Respondents recommended standardized, flexible leave policies; transparent processes for work adjustments and planning; improved access to private, well-equipped lactation spaces; and tailored mental health and wellness programs to support the perinatal period.

CONCLUSIONS

Barriers persist for trainees starting families. Institutional leaders have actionable opportunities to improve equity and institutional support of parenting trainees. Key messages What is already known on this topic: GME trainees face significant challenges during childbearing years, including inconsistent parental leave policies, limited institutional support, and increased risk of stress and burnout, which negatively impact their health and patient-care outcomes. What this study adds: This study contributes trainees' recommendations for institutional reforms necessary to address persistent gaps in support for parenting trainees, such as insufficient parental leave, inadequate lactation accommodations, and barriers to mental health care. How this study might affect research, practice, or policy: Incorporating trainee perspectives is crucial to developing effective interventions. Institutions and national standards should prioritize equitable parental leave, flexible scheduling, and comprehensive supports to foster a culture that aligns with trainees' personal and professional goals. Research Questions How do Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requirements and institutional policies reinforce or mitigate structural inequities that impact parent medical trainees? What systemic barriers and supports shape access to perinatal health and mental health resources for parent medical trainees? How might medical trainees' perspectives influence the development and implementation of Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requirements and institutional policies that better support medical trainees ability to balance professional training and family responsibilities?

摘要

背景

美国各地研究生医学教育(GME)项目中的住院医师和研究员通常在生育年龄完成培训,这给怀孕和为人父母的学员在平衡工作和家庭方面带来了挑战。机构政策必须更好地支持这些学员。先前的研究表明,得到支持的学员职业倦怠感降低、健康状况改善,患者治疗效果也更好。

目的

本研究评估了怀孕和为人父母的GME学员的经历和未得到满足的需求,并提出了他们对改善支持的建议。

方法

我们采用顺序解释性混合方法设计,研究了怀孕和为人父母的学员未得到满足的需求和挑战,以及他们提出的改进建议。2023年,我们向俄勒冈健康与科学大学(OHSU)所有专业的所有GME学员发放了一份调查问卷。160名符合条件的参与者中有98人完成了调查(回复率约为60%)。

结果

尽管有现有政策,俄勒冈健康与科学大学的学员仍面临持续挑战。通过对定量和开放式调查数据的分析,我们确定了三个主题及相关建议:(1)休假与覆盖——充足的育儿假存在障碍,GME政策执行不一致;(2)哺乳——由于资源有限,实现母乳喂养目标需要付出巨大努力;(3)健康与儿童保育——现有政策对生育、儿童保育机会和心理健康产生了负面影响。受访者建议制定标准化、灵活的休假政策;工作调整和规划流程透明化;增加使用设备完善的私密哺乳空间的机会;以及制定针对性的心理健康和保健项目以支持围产期。

结论

对于组建家庭的学员来说,障碍依然存在。机构领导有切实可行的机会来改善对为人父母学员的公平性和机构支持。关键信息 关于该主题已知的情况:GME学员在生育年龄面临重大挑战,包括育儿假政策不一致、机构支持有限以及压力和职业倦怠风险增加,这些对他们的健康和患者护理结果产生负面影响。本研究的补充内容:本研究提供了学员对机构改革的建议,这些改革对于解决在支持为人父母学员方面持续存在的差距是必要的,比如育儿假不足、哺乳设施不完善以及心理健康护理障碍。本研究可能如何影响研究、实践或政策:纳入学员的观点对于制定有效的干预措施至关重要。机构和国家标准应优先考虑公平的育儿假、灵活的排班和全面的支持,以营造一种与学员个人和职业目标相一致的文化氛围。研究问题 研究生医学教育认证委员会的要求和机构政策如何强化或减轻影响实习医生父母的结构性不平等?哪些系统性障碍和支持因素影响实习医生父母获得围产期健康和心理健康资源?医学学员的观点可能如何影响研究生医学教育认证委员会要求和机构政策的制定与实施,这些政策能更好地支持医学学员平衡专业培训和家庭责任的能力?

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