Abstract
Recent literature on parental leave during residency has focused on the importance of supporting new mothers, but the needs and challenges faced by expectant nonchildbearing residents are less well described. Male residents are more likely than their female counterparts to have children during surgical training, and they experience similar stressors including childcare and conflicts between work and home priorities. As nonchildbearing parents of this generation become more involved in childrearing, the need to establish inclusive parental leave policies is essential. The aim of this study was to provide a deeper understanding of the perspectives of male residents about parental leave. A semi-structured interview guide was developed using a literature search and an expert panel. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim and emergent themes were identified using content analysis. Four academic institutions. Four focus groups were held with of a total of 15 male resident-parents. These were selected using convenience sampling. Multiple themes emerged: 1) male residents perceive greater stigma attached to taking leave compared to female colleagues; 2) paternity leave policies are vague and sometimes non-existent; 3) male residents experience a high burden of guilt related to burdening peers with clinical coverage while on leave; 4) male residents face internal conflict between surgical and parental responsibilities; 5) male residents have little mentorship on successful work-life integration and feel compelled to model the behavior of their attendings who often prioritize career before family; and 6) shifts in family values and priorities are common following childbirth and impact how male resident-parents view other new parents in training. Significant challenges exist for residents who become fathers during their surgical training. Key stressors include poorly defined leave policies, historic paradigms of prioritizing professional duties before personal duties, stigma against taking time off for parental bonding in the absence of medical need, and guilt related to extra work imposed on colleagues by time away. Establishment of formal parental leave policies for both genders, programmatic support to offset the increased workload on colleagues, and greater mentorship on balancing family and career are needed to foster a culture of work-life integration.
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