Abstract
Medical practitioners are considered to be an occupational group with a high workload. However, findings on working hours are incomplete. Therefore, we investigated data on "normal" working hours and corresponding preferences in the course of an analysis of the Microcensus 2017. Established physicians reported an average working time of 48,8 h per week for full-time employment, 46,2 h as dependent employees. Dependent employees working part-time, reported about 4 h more than established doctors. Male doctors reported about 4 h more than female doctors when working full-time, and 5 h less when working part-time. The proportion of part-time work was significantly higher for female physicians than for male physicians (28% vs. 10%). The specific analysis for established doctors also showed an inverse discrepancy: if part-time, female physicians worked 4 h more than male physicians; if full-time, male physicians worked 4 h more than female physicians. Established doctors worked less than employees when working part-time. Here, too, the rate was higher for female physicians (19,5% vs. 10,6%). Overall, 14% worked part-time (just under 20 h per week), 86% full-time (just under 49 h). Dentists reported slightly lower working hours, while general practitioners and specialists were about the same at 45 hours. This difference was due to differences in full-time work, which is about 50 h for general practitioners and specialists and 46 h for dentists. In contrast, part-time dentists worked longer hours (24 vs. 18 h). Only a few physicians, especially those working part-time (6,5%), stated that they would like to work more. Most of them would like to work slightly more hours. The majority of women cited family obligations (68%) as the reason for part-time work, while men mostly cited "other" reasons (76%) and less often childcare or personal/family obligations (15%). A total of 13% of those working full-time would like to work fewer hours, women slightly more often. This analysis complements sources such as the Zi Practice Panel. At the overall level, the microcensus average was 5 h lower than the ZiPP (50 h/week). The limitations for survey data known from methodology are countered by the very high sample quality.
Published Version
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