麻醉科受训人员的怀孕和生育问题:美国麻醉医师协会调查。

Molly B Kraus, Holly M Thomson, Franklin Dexter, Perene V Patel, Sarah E Dodd, Marlene E Girardo, Linda B Hertzberg, Amy C S Pearson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管现在约有一半的美国医科学生是女性,但麻醉学培训项目尚未实现性别均等。女学员的经历和需求,包括与孕产相关的经历和需求,日益成为麻醉学领域需要及时关注的问题。目前,关于麻醉学培训中女医师生育经历的数据有限:2018 年 3 月,我们通过电子邮件对美国麻醉医师协会的女性会员进行了调查。问题涉及怀孕、产假、哺乳和母亲身份。我们分析了一部分受访者的数据,这些受访者在培训期间怀孕或生孩子,并且毕业于 2000 年或之后:共有 542 名在 2000 年或之后完成培训的受访者报告在麻醉培训期间怀孕 752 次。产假的中位长度为 7 周,随着时间的推移变化不大。在许多怀孕期间,妇女认为她们的假期不够长(59.6%)或不鼓励她们休更多的假期(65.7%)。有 64.1%的情况是,怀孕假和相关假期延长了从培训毕业的时间。在大约一半的怀孕案例中(51.3%),妇女达到了预期的哺乳时间,但随着时间的推移,获得指定哺乳空间的机会明显减少(假发现调整后 P = 0.0004)。受训母亲通常不愿意生孩子(51.6%),或认为怀孕会带来负面影响(60.3%)。这些态度并没有随着时间的推移或与女性项目领导的关系而改变:结论:麻醉学女学员在试图平衡工作和生育时通常会遇到障碍。最近的政策变化已经解决了我们研究中发现的一些挑战。未来的研究将需要评估这些变化对麻醉学受训者的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pregnancy and Motherhood for Trainees in Anesthesiology: A Survey of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

Background: Although approximately half of US medical students are now women, anesthesiology training programs have yet to achieve gender parity. Women trainees' experiences and needs, including those related to motherhood, are increasingly timely concerns for the field of anesthesiology. At present, limited data exists on the childbearing experiences of women physicians in anesthesiology training.

Methods: In March of 2018, we surveyed women members of the American Society of Anesthesiologists via email. Questions addressed pregnancy, maternity leave, lactation, and motherhood. We analyzed data from a subset of respondents who were pregnant or had children during training and graduated in the year 2000 or later.

Results: A total of 542 respondents who completed training in the year 2000 or after reported 752 pregnancies during anesthesia training. A maternity leave had a median length of 7 weeks and did not change significantly over time. During many pregnancies, women felt their leave was inadequate (59.6%) or felt discouraged from taking more time off (65.7%). Pregnancy and associated leave extended graduation from training in 64.1% of cases. In approximately half of pregnancies (51.3%), women met desired breastfeeding duration, with access to designated lactation space decreasing significantly over time (false-discovery adjusted P = .0004). Trainee mothers often felt discouraged from having children (51.6%) or perceived negative stigma surrounding pregnancy (60.3%). These attitudes did not change over time or in relation to female program leadership.

Conclusions: Women anesthesiology trainees commonly face obstacles when attempting to balance work and motherhood. Recent policy changes have addressed some of the challenges identified in our study. Future studies will need to evaluate how these changes have impacted anesthesiology trainees.

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