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- Erika L Rangel, Manuel Castillo-Angeles, Yue-Yung Hu, Ankush Gosain, Sarah Rae Easter, Zara Cooper, Rachel B Atkinson, and Eugene S Kim.
- Department of Surgery, Division of General and Gastrointestinal Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston.
- Ann. Surg. 2022 Sep 1; 276 (3): 491-499.
ObjectiveWe sought to assess whether lack of workplace support for clinical work reductions during pregnancy was associated with major pregnancy complications.BackgroundSurgeons are at high risk of major pregnancy complications. Although rigorous operative schedules pose increased risk, few reduce their clinical duties during pregnancy.MethodsAn electronic survey was distributed to US surgeons who had at least 1 live birth. Lack of workplace support was defined as: (1) desiring but feeling unable to reduce clinical duties during pregnancy due to failure of the workplace/training program to accommodate and/or concerns about financial penalties, burden on colleagues, requirement to make up missed call, being perceived as weak; (2) disagreeing colleagues and/or leadership were supportive of obstetrician-prescribed bedrest. Multivariate logistic regression determined the association between lack of workplace support and major pregnancy complications.ResultsOf 671 surgeons, 437 (65.13%) reported lack of workplace support during pregnancy and 302 (45.01%) experienced major pregnancy complications. Surgeons without workplace support were at higher risk of major pregnancy complications than those who had workplace support (odds ratio: 2.44; 95% confidence interval: 1.58-3.75). Bedrest was prescribed to 110/671 (16.39%) surgeons, 38 (34.55%) of whom disagreed that colleagues and/or leadership were supportive. Of the remaining surgeons, 417/560 (74.5%) desired work reductions but were deterred by lack of workplace support.ConclusionsLack of workplace support for reduction in clinical duties is associated with adverse obstetric outcomes for surgeons. This is a modifiable workplace obstacle that deters surgeons from acting to optimize their infant's and their own health. To ensure the health of expectant surgeons, departmental policies should support reduction of clinical workload in an equitable manner without creating financial penalties, requiring payback for missed call duties, or overburdening colleagues.Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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