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Revised PMJ Manuscript 01-11-2021.pdf (791.28 kB)

British doctors' work-life balance and home-life satisfaction: a cross-sectional study

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-14, 06:13 authored by Swati Parida, Abdullah Aamir, Jahangir Alom, Tania A Rufai, Sohaib R Rufai
Purpose
To assess British doctors’ work–life balance, home-life satisfaction and associated barriers.

Study design
We designed an online survey using Google Forms and distributed this via a closed social media group with 7031 members, exclusively run for British doctors. No identifiable data were collected and all respondents provided consent for their responses to be used anonymously. The questions covered demographic data followed by exploration of work–life balance and home-life satisfaction across a broad range of domains, including barriers thereto. Thematic analysis was performed for free-text responses.

Results
417 doctors completed the survey (response rate: 6%, typical for online surveys). Only 26% reported a satisfactory work–life balance; 70% of all respondents reported their work negatively affected their relationships and 87% reported their work negatively affected their hobbies. A significant proportion of respondents reported delaying major life events due to their working patterns: 52% delaying buying a home, 40% delaying marriage and 64% delaying having children. Female doctors were most likely to enter less-than-full-time working or leave their specialty. Thematic analysis revealed seven key themes from free-text responses: unsocial working, rota issues, training issues, less-than-full-time working, location, leave and childcare.

Conclusions
This study highlights the barriers to work–life balance and home-life satisfaction among British doctors, including strains on relationships and hobbies, leading to many doctors delaying certain milestones or opting to leave their training position altogether. It is imperative to address these issues to improve the well-being of British doctors and improve retention of the current workforce.

History

Citation

Postgraduate Medical Journal Published Online First: 17 December 2021. doi: 10.1136/postgradmedj-2021-141338

Author affiliation

Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Postgraduate Medical Journal (PGMJ)

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

issn

0032-5473

eissn

1469-0756

Acceptance date

2021-11-17

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-02-14

Language

English