Pediatric Trainees as Parents: Perspectives on Parenthood From Pediatric Resident Parents

Prior work across medical and surgical specialties shows that parenthood during residency training is associated with challenges including limited parental leave, lack of accommodations for breastfeeding, and concerns about career impact. Less is known about the experience of parenthood during pedia...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic pediatrics 2021-08, Vol.21 (6), p.934-942
Hauptverfasser: Wilder, Jayme L., Pingree, Elizabeth W., Hark, Caitlyn M., Marcus, Carolyn H., Rabinowitz, Elliot C., Michelson, Catherine D., Winn, Ariel S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Prior work across medical and surgical specialties shows that parenthood during residency training is associated with challenges including limited parental leave, lack of accommodations for breastfeeding, and concerns about career impact. Less is known about the experience of parenthood during pediatric residency training. The objective of this study was to identify themes related to the experience of parenthood during pediatric residency. In this qualitative study using thematic analysis, we performed semistructured interviews with participants who were currently in pediatric residency or had graduated in the previous 3 years and were parents during residency. Participants were recruited by e-mail. Data were collected and analyzed iteratively until thematic saturation was achieved. Two independent reviewers coded each transcript. Codes were grouped into categories and then into dominant themes. Thirty-one residents were interviewed from 13 pediatric residency programs. Four major themes regarding the experience of parenthood during pediatric residency were defined by the data: 1) the struggles of parenthood and residency exacerbate each other; 2) institutional modifiers strongly influence the experiences of resident parents; 3) resident parents develop skills and perspectives that enhance their pediatric training; and 4) although levels of support for pediatric resident parents vary, the culture of pediatrics positively influences the experience of parenthood in residency. There are numerous challenges navigating parenthood and residency, but institutional policies and culture can modify the experience. Importantly, the educational value of parenthood to pediatric training was immense. Our findings may be used to design interventions to support parenting during residency.
ISSN:1876-2859
1876-2867
DOI:10.1016/j.acap.2021.04.009