Maternity Leaves in Training: A View From the Bridge
(Late Response to post on Nov 10, 2014)
The problem of maternity leave for residents goes well
beyond the good will, or lack of it, of training directors and local programs.
Different specialty boards establish minimum standards for residents to be
board eligible, and these usually involve specified upper and lower limits of
time spent in particular areas. Stipends
come from multiple sources and are tied to the work that the resident does,
which makes it difficult to set aside money from one year to pay for time doing
make up work in another. When a resident goes on leave, other residents have to
pick up her responsibilities, and they will not receive compensation for doing
so. At the same time, they may not violate duty hour limits.
Program directors, of which I was once one, have to figure
out how to create maternity policies that do not violate minimum requirements,
do not unduly burden other residents in the program, do not violate other
regulations and still acknowledge the legitimate needs of the resident who
requests leave. When I became a program
director, my youngest child was 4, and the issues of maternity leave were still
very fresh in my mind. My first thought
was to ask the department to hire a PA or master’s level nurse who could float
to cover the clinical responsibilities of residents who took leave. That went
nowhere, though I still think it would have been feasible and fair. I then tried
to get the program directors organization to survey its membership to see what
different programs were doing. The push back was immediate and negative.
Programs with generous leave policies were reluctant to publish them, for fear
that residents would select them to take advantage of them, multiplying the
headaches of trying to make accommodations. Many programs had no policies at
all.
I am sad to see that so little has changed in the last
eighteen years—soon, my daughters will be the ones who have to deal with maternity
leave. Change is unlikely unless more women become program directors and choose
to work on modifying the policies of various specialty boards. The family
practice board position (see MIM Nov
10, 2014) is one that others could adopt. It suggests that programs might
create some creditable elective time that could be spent reading or doing some
other scholarship from home. Women should be allowed/encouraged to schedule the
more taxing rotations early in pregnancy (and I would suggest also front loading
as much call as one can). It is still up to the program how much leave to allow
and whether it will be paid or unpaid. The AAFP also leaves unanswered how to
deal with what may be competing demands of the law in a particular state and
the requirements of a specialty board.
In the end, women physicians cannot expect to be treated
more fairly and generously than other women. Having a child during training
will never be easy, but we should be mindful that we are generally privileged.
We may have to delay some phase of education, or prolong it by working part
time, or even chose a specialty or a position we would otherwise not have done,
because of having a child. Compared to
the pregnant UPS driver who gets fired, or the Walmart worker who has to stand
on her feet all day, or the mother who can’t work at all because she can’t
afford childcare, we are lucky indeed.