Background: Many countries have insufficient numbers of family doctors, and more females than males leave the workforce at a younger age or have difficulty sustaining careers. Understanding the differing attitudes, pressures, and perceptions between genders toward their medical occupation is important to minimise workforce attrition. Aim: To explore factors influencing the resilience of female family doctors during lifecycle transitions. Design & setting: International qualitative study with female family doctors from all world regions. Method: Twenty semi-structured online Skype interviews, followed by three focus groups to develop recommendations. Data were transcribed and analysed using applied framework analysis. Results: Interview part...
BACKGROUND: Women physicians face unique obstacles while progressing through their careers, navigati...
Abstract Background Medical training occurs during peak childbearing years. However, the intense wor...
In Pakistan, women outnumber men in medical colleges with 80 percent enrollment, yet many fail to pr...
CITATION: Kruger, A. & Bezuidenhout, C. 2015. Factors influencing female doctors’ career decisions a...
Goals: The increasing number of vacant positions for doctors increasingly puts the issue of reconci...
Burnout is a sign of long-range exhaustion and deteriorated challenge that affects the wellbeing an...
Background: The greater participation of women in medicine in recent years, and recent trends showin...
Objectives: To identify factors that influenced women who chose to leave academic medicine. Design a...
Contains fulltext : 99337.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Health-care in...
Reconciling work and family is a major challenge for female doctors. Women remain as the primary car...
BACKGROUND: Women physicians face unique obstacles while progressing through their careers, navigati...
Background: Even though women outnumber men enrolled in medical school, making up 59% of entrants in...
Outmoded career structures and attitudes mean that the UK risks losing out on the valuable contribut...
Objectives Investigate the work–life balance of doctors in training in the UK from the perspectives ...
Objectives: A recent BMA survey revealed that very few NHS doctors felt comfortable discussing sympt...
BACKGROUND: Women physicians face unique obstacles while progressing through their careers, navigati...
Abstract Background Medical training occurs during peak childbearing years. However, the intense wor...
In Pakistan, women outnumber men in medical colleges with 80 percent enrollment, yet many fail to pr...
CITATION: Kruger, A. & Bezuidenhout, C. 2015. Factors influencing female doctors’ career decisions a...
Goals: The increasing number of vacant positions for doctors increasingly puts the issue of reconci...
Burnout is a sign of long-range exhaustion and deteriorated challenge that affects the wellbeing an...
Background: The greater participation of women in medicine in recent years, and recent trends showin...
Objectives: To identify factors that influenced women who chose to leave academic medicine. Design a...
Contains fulltext : 99337.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Health-care in...
Reconciling work and family is a major challenge for female doctors. Women remain as the primary car...
BACKGROUND: Women physicians face unique obstacles while progressing through their careers, navigati...
Background: Even though women outnumber men enrolled in medical school, making up 59% of entrants in...
Outmoded career structures and attitudes mean that the UK risks losing out on the valuable contribut...
Objectives Investigate the work–life balance of doctors in training in the UK from the perspectives ...
Objectives: A recent BMA survey revealed that very few NHS doctors felt comfortable discussing sympt...
BACKGROUND: Women physicians face unique obstacles while progressing through their careers, navigati...
Abstract Background Medical training occurs during peak childbearing years. However, the intense wor...
In Pakistan, women outnumber men in medical colleges with 80 percent enrollment, yet many fail to pr...