Surgical News Volume 23 Issue 1

Page 20

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Fertility and pregnancy Pregnancy and neonatal complications are higher in surgical Trainees. What are we doing about it? Medicine can be a demanding profession, with long working hours and years spent training to become a specialist consultant. The majority of the training time is during a period when many also want to plan and raise a family. This may present as a major impediment to equal opportunity in medicine or specific sub-specialties within medicine. As we rapidly try to move away from medicine being a male dominated profession, there is a need to support women to achieve both family and professional goals. A recent publication1 in the USA highlighted not just work-life balance difficulties for women surgeons, but, alarmingly, also markedly increased risks of infertility and pregnancy complications. There are several factors contributing to this including delaying pregnancy because of the demands and inflexibility of surgical training, long working hours, and lack of parental leave options. The mere thought that our surgical training program could be increasing both the risks of infertility and neonatal complications has inspired Dr Jasmina Kevric researched the effects in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand and started an awareness and mentorship campaign. Dr Kevric’s Australian-first survey investigated the incidence of fertility, pregnancy complications and breastfeeding practices among Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand doctors. The results are currently under peer-review.

juggling surgical training and family life. Residents and registrars have shared personal stories of pregnancy-associated complications such as miscarriage, unsuccessful IVF cycles, neonatal deaths, childhood illnesses and marriage stress.

Dr Grace Chu and family

However, the findings indicate a similar worrisome picture to that in the United States. Delaying family planning due to training requirements can increase age-related pregnancy complications. Long working hours increases the risks of neonatal complications, while options for parttime training are limited and only suit those in early pregnancy who can arrange flexible training for the following year. With the additional systemic stresses brought to bear upon public hospitals due to COVID-19, surgical Trainees and younger Fellows are under pressure to work longer hours—in a busier environment—with reduced time for family planning and safe spaces to breastfeed or express. Dr Kevric was conscious of the age-related infertility and pregnancy complications and chose to start her family during surgical training. She was lucky to secure a week-on/week-off flexible training position through her training hub (Austin/Northern) and found working in the third trimester demanding, but less physically challenging. Other issues that have been noticed or experienced by Dr Kevric’s research colleagues, Dr Russell Hodgson and Dr Grace Chew, include increased family, fertility, and pregnancy stress associated with rural and remote rotations, and a lack of paternity leave (both inside and outside of medicine) to support new mothers at home or returning to work.

Dr Jasmina Kevric

As a female surgeon and surgical mentor, Dr Chew has been privy to the difficulties experienced by Trainees faced with

Surgical Trainees need more support to navigate training and parenthood. Education on fertility is crucial early in training. Good access to flexible training allows Trainees to navigate the physical challenges of long working hours during pregnancy, and safe space to express breastmilk will aid in preventing early weaning. In enabling our Trainees and indeed younger Fellows in their quest to start and care for their young families, we will reap the benefits of achieving diversity in surgery, maintaining a healthy balanced surgical workforce and encouraging women to pursue surgery as a sustainable career.

Dr Russell Hodgson and family

To better address this and improve support to medical parents, Dr Kevric has founded a mentorship program ROSE (Resource, Outreach, Support, Education) and is open to all Australian doctors. More information: RoseforMedicalParents.com Reference:

1. Rangel, E., et al., Incidence of Infertility and Pregnancy Complications in US Female Surgeons JAMA Surg 2021 Oct 1;156(10):905-915

Authors: Dr Jasmina Kevric (MBBS, MPH) - General Surgery SET 5 Trainee Dr Russell Hodgson - Research Director and Hepatobiliary Surgeon Dr Grace Chew - Breast and General Surgeon


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Articles inside

Research scholarship and grant opportunities for 2023

19min
pages 54-60

Cancer research more promising than ever

4min
pages 52-53

The Educator of Merit Award

4min
pages 50-51

Imitation - a sincere form of plagiarism

7min
pages 48-49

East Timor Eye Program evaluation

4min
pages 42-43

New professional development opportunties

1min
page 41

New Perioperative Mortality Committee for VASM

3min
page 36

Fellowship Services - supporting RACS Younger Fellows

6min
pages 38-39

Education activities

1min
page 40

Cosmetic surgery review underway

3min
page 37

Mt Gambier’s rural surgical team lead by example

6min
pages 34-35

Astley Cooper’s Illustrations of the Diseases of the Breast

6min
pages 32-33

Advocacy at RACS

3min
page 29

College publications making transition to digital

3min
page 31

November Annual Academic Surgery Conference highlights

2min
page 22

Developing a Career and Skills in Academic Surgery Course 2022

2min
page 23

A passion for rural medicine

7min
pages 26-27

Data - the key to meeting road safety targets

2min
page 28

Terminal care cases in the Australian and New Zealand Audit of Surgical Mortality

4min
pages 24-25

The Indigenous Trainee paving the way to Cardiothoracic surgery

3min
page 21

A tale of two surgeons

5min
pages 18-19

Fertility and pregnancy

3min
page 20

Outstanding work and research celebrated

7min
pages 16-17

New College name proposed

2min
page 11

President’s perspective

4min
pages 4-5

Examination update

1min
page 10

International Women’s Day event

2min
page 15

New role for trailblazing Orthopaedic surgeon

7min
pages 8-9

New beginnings - going it alone

5min
pages 12-14

Vice President’s message

6min
pages 6-7
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Surgical News Volume 23 Issue 1 by RACSCommunications - Issuu