Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol 82, Issue 9 528-531, Copyright © 1989 by Royal Society of Medicine
ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
VJ Warren and RE Wakeford
East Anglian Regional Health Authority.
Maternity leave and part-time training should facilitate the integration of the family and professional lives of young women doctors - whom the NHS cannot afford to lose as their numbers rise to half the number of the graduates of UK medical schools. Women doctors' planned professional activity is high, but to what extent do the maternity leave and part-time training arrangements assist them in fulfilling their plans? One hundred and forty-five young women doctors reported their experiences of and views on maternity leave and part-time training. Most had children between 6 and 10 years after qualification, to fit with career development. Seventy-one per cent of the confinements had qualified for maternity leave and pay, but there were complaints about the working of the regulations, particularly in relation to junior hospital doctors' short contracts. When asked to comment about part-time training, most (77%) expressed themselves as broadly in favour - only three actively opposing it. It was perceived as difficult to organize by 20% of respondents, as difficult to undertake by 29%, and as being of low status by 15%. This study concludes that the arrangements for maternity leave need to be improved and that the availability and status of part-time training need enhancing - especially to encourage women doctors to enter careers in hospital medicine.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
J. Morrell and A. Roberts How To Do It: Make an application for flexible (part time) training BMJ, July 22, 1995; 311(6999): 242 - 244. [Full Text] |
||||