Parental Leave Policies in Residency: A National Survey of Internal Medicine Program Directors

Purpose To characterize the existence, accessibility, and content of parental leave policies, as well as barriers to program-level policy implementation among internal medicine (IM) program directors (PDs) and to assess the willingness of PDs to implement a national standardized policy. Method In 2019, the Association of Program Directors in Internal Medicine conducted a survey of 422 IM PDs. Along with other content, 38 questions addressed 4 primary outcomes: parental leave policy existence, accessibility, content, and barriers. The authors compared programs with and without a program-level policy and applied qualitative content analysis to open-ended questions about barriers to policy implementation and openness to a national standard. Results The response rate was 69.4% (293/422). Of responding programs, 86% (250/290) reported a written parental leave policy with 43% (97/225) of these originating at the program level. Program-level policies, compared with policies at other levels, were more likely to address scheduling during pregnancy (38%, 36/95 vs 22%, 27/124; P = .018); peer coverage (24%, 21/89 vs 15%, 16/109; P = .037), how the duration of extended training is determined (81%, 72/89 vs 44%, 48/109; P
Source: Academic Medicine - Category: Universities & Medical Training Tags: Research Reports Source Type: research