Medical Student Perceptions of Family Planning During Residency Training in Surgical Fields

Several studies have investigated surgical residents' perceptions of family planning, and many have investigated medical students' perceptions of surgical specialties; however, there is limited research on medical students' perceptions of the impact of family planning on the decision...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2024-08, Vol.300, p.43-53
Hauptverfasser: Lawson, Grace Elizabeth, Dittrich, Sophia, Ebert, Madeline, Treat, Robert, Dream, Sophie
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container_title The Journal of surgical research
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creator Lawson, Grace Elizabeth
Dittrich, Sophia
Ebert, Madeline
Treat, Robert
Dream, Sophie
description Several studies have investigated surgical residents' perceptions of family planning, and many have investigated medical students' perceptions of surgical specialties; however, there is limited research on medical students' perceptions of the impact of family planning on the decision to pursue surgical training. This study aims to investigate male and female medical students’ perceptions of family planning in residency. A survey was distributed to all medical students at a single medical school in the Midwest between February 2023 and June 2023. The survey was adapted from a prior study investigating resident perceptions of family planning. It included questions about parental leave, having children, and perceived barriers to family planning. One hundred students completed surveys. Seventy-four (74%) respondents identified as female and 57 (57%) were interested in surgery. Approximately half (55, 55%) of the respondents were strongly or definitely considering having children during residency. However, only eight (8%) students were aware of policies applicable to having children during residency. A majority (85, 85%) felt the decision to pursue surgical residency would prevent or delay having children at their preferred time. Most students felt they would be negatively perceived by peers (62, 62%) and faculty (87, 87%) if they had children during training. The highest perceived barriers to having children during training were work-time demands, childcare barriers, and time away from training. Both men and women are interested in having children during residency but are unaware of the relevant parental leave policies and are concerned about how training will be impacted by taking time away or a lack of flexibility. Without transparency and flexibility in surgical residency, both men and women may forgo having children during training or choose a specialty they perceive to be more conducive to childbearing.
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subjects Family planning
Specialty choice
title Medical Student Perceptions of Family Planning During Residency Training in Surgical Fields
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