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- Hilary Sanfey, Jeannie Savas, and Celeste Hollands.
- Department of Surgery, Transplant Division, P.O. Box 800709, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA 22908-0709, and Department of Pediatric Surgery, Children's Hospital of Buffalo, NY, USA. has9s@virginia.edu
- Am. J. Surg. 2006 Sep 1; 192 (3): 366-71.
BackgroundReduced resident work hours sparked debate regarding lifestyle of clinical faculty. We hypothesized surgery department chairs would not be supportive of part-time clinical faculty (PTF) and would be reluctant to grant requests to reduce total institutional commitment (TIC) or total professional effort.MethodA 16-question survey was mailed to 202 surgery chairs requesting department demographics, and perception of PTF. Chairs were given the option of identifying themselves. PTF referred to full-time equivalent clinicians who reduce their TIC for personal/family reasons and did not include clinicians with research or teaching commitments limiting clinical responsibilities.ResultsA total of 112 of 186 (61.2%) delivered surveys were returned. Of these, 48.2% of respondents indicated clinicians had requested reduced TIC and 40.2% of departments had PTF. Only 1 chair was unable to grant a request to reduce TIC. A total of 42.8% of respondents indicated that PTF receive reduced salary-linked benefits but (58.9%) no change in either academic status or (52.7%) eligibility for promotion/tenure. The percentage of women faculty was 12.0% in departments with PTF and 10.5% in departments without PTF. A total of 42.8% of chairs agreed facilitating PTF would improve faculty retention versus 24.1% who disagreed (P<.0001). When compared with departments without PTF, chairs with PTF were more supportive that facilitating PTF would improve faculty retention (53.3% vs 32.7%, P<.001) and would be beneficial to their departments (57.8% vs 22.4%, P<.001). Sixty-two percent of respondents volunteered their names and contact information for follow-up.ConclusionsContrary to our hypothesis, surgery department chairs appear to be supportive of PTF and were interested in discussing this further.
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