Isolation, discrimination, and feeling “constant Guilt”: A mixed‐methods analysis of female physicians’ experience with fertility, family planning, and oncology careers

Author:

Marion Sarah1,Dalwadi Shraddha M.2,Kuczmarska‐Haas Aleksandra3,Gillespie Erin F.4,Ludwig Michelle S.5,Holliday Emma B.6ORCID,Thom Bridgette7ORCID,Chino Fumiko8ORCID,Lee Anna9

Affiliation:

1. University of Virginia School of Medicine Charlottesville Virginia USA

2. University of Texas San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

3. Hartford HealthCare Cancer Institute Hartford Connecticut USA

4. University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA

6. The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

7. UNC Social Work Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

8. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York New York USA

9. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionFamily planning among female physicians is harmed by high risks of infertility, workload burden, poor family leave policies, and gender discrimination. Many women report feeling unsupported in the workplace, despite national policies to protect against unfair treatment.MethodsThis secondary analysis applied a modified version of the rigorous and accelerated data reduction technique to conduct a thematic analysis of comments to an open‐ended prompt. Comments were coded by multiple trained researchers then grouped and merged into illustrative themes via qualitative techniques.ResultsOf 1004 responses to the quantitative survey, 162 physicians completed the open‐ended prompt. Initial codes (n = 16) were combined into eight groups including, from which three overarching themes were identified. Institutional barriers were highlighted with comments discussing the increased need for parental leave, part‐time options and the concern for academic or professional punishment for being pregnant and/or having children. Departmental barriers were explored with comments grouped around codes of discrimination/negative culture and challenges with breastfeeding/pumping and childcare. Personal barriers were discussed in themes highlighting the difficulties that female physicians faced around the timing of family planning, challenges with reproductive health and assistance, and alternative circumstances and/or decisions against family planning.ConclusionBarriers to family planning in oncology exist across career domains from dysfunctional maternity leave to poor education on infertility risk. Solutions include improving institutional support, expanding parental leave, and general cultural change to improve awareness and promotion of family and career balance.

Publisher

Wiley

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