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Relation between a career and family life for English hospital consultants: qualitative, semistructured interview study

BMJ 2000; 320 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.320.7247.1437 (Published 27 May 2000) Cite this as: BMJ 2000;320:1437
  1. Carol Dumelow, research fellow (carol{at}cdumelow.freeserve.co.uk)a,
  2. Peter Littlejohns, professor of public healtha,
  3. Sîan Griffiths, director of public health and health policyb
  1. a Health Care Evaluation Unit, Department of Public Health Sciences, St George's Hospital Medical School, London SW17 0RE
  2. b Department of Public Health and Health Policy, Oxfordshire Health Authority, Oxford OX3 7LG
  1. Correspondence to: C Dumelow, 92 Tennyson Avenue, Rugby CV22 6JF
  • Accepted 22 February 2000

Abstract

Objective: To explore the relation between work and family life among hospital consultants and their attitude towards the choices and constraints that influence this relation.

Design: Qualitative study of consultants' experiences and views based on tape recorded semistructured interviews.

Setting: Former South Thames health region in southeast England.

Participants: 202 male and female NHS hospital consultants aged between 40 to 50 years representing all hospital medical specialties.

Results: Three types of relation between work and family life (career dominant, segregated, and accommodating) were identified among hospital consultants. Most consultants had a segregated relation, although female consultants were more likely than male consultants to have a career dominant or an accommodating relation. Many male consultants and some female consultants expressed considerable dissatisfaction with the balance between their career and family life. A factor influencing this dissatisfaction was the perceived lack of choice to spend time on their personal or family life, because of the working practices and attitudes within hospital culture, if they wanted a successful career.

Conclusions: Consultants are currently fitting in with the profession rather than the profession adapting to enable doctors to have fulfilling professional and personal lives. Current government policies to increase the medical workforce and promote family friendly policies in the NHS ought to take account of the need for a fundamental change in hospital culture to enable doctors to be more involved in their personal or family life without detriment to their career progress.

Editorial by Theorell

Introduction

In the past, doctors were expected to plan their professional and domestic lives in line with William Osler's view of a medical career (“heavy as are your responsibilities to those nearest and dearest, they are outweighed by the responsibilities to yourself, to the profession and to the public” 1). Over a century later, Department of Health initiatives are directed at increasing the size of the medical workforce and promoting family friendly policies and retainer schemes.2 3 Organisational practices as factors in influencing the balance between work and family life have been debated in the social science literature.47 In the medical literature, considerable attention has been given to the way women doctors balance their work and family commitments.813 With three exceptions,1416 studies have focused on women doctors, and little research has been conducted among hospital consultants. Up to date information is needed if family friendly policies are to be adopted. We interviewed consultants about the relation between their work and their personal or family life and how they feel about the choices and constraints influencing this relation.

Methods

Participants and setting

Disproportionate stratified sampling was used to obtain a sample of 286 male and female hospital consultants aged 40-50 years working in all medical specialties in NHS hospitals in the former South Thames health region in southeast England. We estimated that this sample would provide data on 100 male and 100 female consultants (based on a 70% response rate). Hospital specialties were grouped according to three criteria: the hours worked; the type of work undertaken; and the amount of on-call work required. A sampling fraction of 1 in 2 women and 1 in 6 men was used for the diagnostic, medical, psychiatry, and anaesthetics specialties. For the surgical specialty group, all women were selected, and a sampling fraction of 1 in 9 men was used. For the obstetrics and gynaecology group, all women were selected and a 1 in 6 sample was taken for the men.

Interviews

We designed a semistructured interview schedule on the basis of key themes identified from analysis of in-depth interviews with five doctors; discussions with senior academics involved in research studies of hospital doctors; the research questions for the study; and issues prevalent in a review of the medical and sociological literature. The schedule was piloted with a sample of hospital consultants, and changes were made. The final schedule included open ended and precoded questions on five topics (box). Consent to participation in the study was voluntary and was gained from consultants by letter and follow up telephone call. Most consultants agreed to participate. Interviews varied considerably in length, ranging from 45 to 90 minutes (average length one hour); the variation seemed to be associated with different personality types. Most consultants talked candidly about their personal lives, some were grateful for the opportunity to express concerns.

Topics covered in interviews

Work history
  • Employment status, past and current

  • Reasons for employment history

  • Reasons for choice of specialty

Domestic life
  • Marital status

  • Partner's support for participant's career

  • Children and childcare responsibilities

  • Management of child care

  • Management of household tasks

  • Effect of personal and family life on career

  • Effect of medical career on personal and family life

Postgraduate medical training
  • Geographical mobility

  • Effect of organisational working practices on life outside medicine

  • Career structure and effect on personal and family life

Medical environment during training
  • Perceptions of attitudes towards women doctors

  • Perceptions of medical culture

Achievement
  • Attitude towards own achievement in medical career

  • Career aspirations for the future

Interviews were conducted in the consultant's workplace or home. Interviews were conducted by one of the authors (CD) and four social scientists, all of whom had experience in interviewing skills and had received additional training for the study. The interviews were audiotaped to allow assessment of interviewers' reliability and to enable the answers to the open ended questions to be transcribed verbatim. Curricula vitae were obtained from the consultants before interview, and these were used to collect information on work history.

Analysis

The transcribed answers to the open ended questions were analysed using the “framework” qualitative data analysis method.17 The transcripts were studied carefully, and recurring themes were noted. A coding framework was developed from the recurring themes and the aims of the research. This framework was applied systematically to the transcripts to enable the interview data to be coded according to the framework categories. Category codes for each consultant were transferred to a framework chart so that the reorganised data could be analysed. Patterns and differences were identified, and three types of relation between work and family were created (career dominant, segregated, and accommodating). The criteria defining these types were based on aspects of their personal or family life or of their career that had been adjusted or modified in some way to benefit career or personal or family life (box). One of the interviewers (Suzanne Cohen), one of the authors (PL), and another social scientist (Sara Arber) helped the validation process by discussing the development of the categories and the creation of the typologies (and the associations made), which were confirmed or modified as necessary. Quotes used in this paper were selected to represent the range of responses.

Criteria used to develop typologies for work and family relations, and characteristics of consultants in these typologies

Criteria
  • Modifications made to personal and family life to benefit medical career

  • Modifications made to career for perceived benefit to personal and family life

Characteristics
Career dominant relation between work and family
  • Single and childless

  • Divorced and childless

  • Full time continuous career

Segregated relation between work and family
  • Married or cohabiting with children

  • Married or cohabiting without children

  • Divorced with children and primary carer

  • Full time continuous career

  • Family responsibilities organised to enable more time to be involved in career

Accommodating relation between work and family
  • Married or cohabiting with children

  • Men: full time continuous career and career goals or work commitments reduced to be more involved in family life

  • Women: Career break or periods of less than full time training or work (or both of these) because of family responsibilities

Results

Characteristics of consultants interviewed

After exclusion of 11 consultants from the sample of 286 because they were not aged 40-50 years, were no longer working in the South Thames region, or had left hospital medicine, 202 consultants were interviewed (73% response rate). The table1 shows the characteristics of respondents. The proportion of women who responded (82%) was higher than the proportion of men who responded (64%); smaller proportions of men than women in the surgical (58% v 94%) and diagnostic (53% v 93%) specialties responded; and a smaller proportion of women than men in anaesthetics (67% v 74%) responded. A fifth of respondents were consultants in teaching hospitals. Most (82%) of the consultants interviewed were married, and most (79%) respondents had children. Of consultants with children, about a third had children aged 5 years. As in other studies,15 16 women were more likely than men to be younger, single, and childless. Women were also more likely than men to have married at a later grade in their career (62% v 54%); women who had children were more likely to have a child aged 5 years (37%); and women were more likely to have achieved consultant grade at a younger age (table).

Characteristics of 202 male and female consultants interviewed about balance between work and family life. Values are numbers (percentages) of respondents

View this table:

Work and family relations

Relations between work and family life are by nature fluid and dynamic. It is difficult to distinguish between cause and effect, and we have not tried to identify causal relations in this paper. Instead, we examine some of the factors that consultants considered important in shaping the balance between their work and their personal or family life (see previous box on typologies).

Career dominant relation

About a fifth of women and three men believed that their family or personal life had been restricted during their 20s and early 30s, either intentionally or unintentionally, for the benefit of their career. Two women had made a conscious choice at an early stage in their career to forgo having children. The remaining consultants in this group, however, had wanted to develop relationships and have children but thought that the constraints of working practices in hospital medicine and perceived pressure to follow a full time career had been influential in shaping the balance between their career and their personal or family life. Some consultants expressed strong regrets at giving so much time to their medical career. (See box for examples of respondents' comments.)

Comments from consultants with career dominant relation between work and family life

“It may be that I haven't quite got the balance right because I'm aware I gave too much to medicine and lost out as a result.” (Divorced, female, childless; obstetrics and gynaecology)

“I wouldn't start my medical career again. It's taken too much out of me. You don't have a life outside medicine, where other priorities seem not to weigh up. There is no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. There are other ways of living too.” (Single, female, childless; surgery)

“The long hours are very damaging; you tend to fall into a routine of work, eat, sleep, and you become alienated. The rewards to an individual can be tremendous but at great personal sacrifice in terms of life outside medicine.” (Single, male, childless; diagnostics)

Segregated relation

Two thirds of men and just over half of women had highly segregated professional and family lives. Family responsibilities were organised to enable more time to be devoted to their medical career. For both men and women this involved full time domestic support—from a spouse or partner or from a paid domestic worker, or from both. Most women in this group thought that this approach was the only way they could achieve consultant grade and have a family, and most were satisfied with the balance between their career and family life, when set in the context of their perceived choices and constraints. Many men in this group, however, were dissatisfied with the balance between their career and family life. This was due largely to the perceived lack of choice to spend time in their family life (because of working practices and pressure to conform to these practices) if they were to have a successful medical career. (See box for respondents' comments.)

Comments from consultants with segregated relation between work and family life

“I couldn't spread myself more thinly between work and home. I think I have got the level I wish to have as a consultant, which I can build on, and I've got a wonderful home life.” (Married, female, children; surgery)

“I'm not around as much as I would be if I had another career. My boys have grown up with the situation. If I have not been home I have rung. I would like to spend more time with them, but medicine takes everything except your soul.” (Married, male, children; psychiatry)

“It is a pity that medicine in this country historically has been so badly organised that most clinicians in acute specialties work ridiculous hours, at the expense of their health and their families. But if you want to pursue a career in the acute specialties that's the way it is.” (Married, male, children; surgery)

“It puts tremendous pressure on people. Doctors are put under pressure to spend a lot more time on medicine and hospital life than perhaps they ought to because of the way we are trained in medical school. It may mean you are exhausted and have nothing left foranyone else. Some weeks I am emotionally drained, exhausted.” (Married, male, children; anaesthetics)

Accommodating relation

About a tenth of men and a third of women had an accommodating relation between work and family. All women in this group had worked part time or taken a career break at some point in their career. Men had restricted their work commitments or limited their career goals to benefit their personal or family life. Most men and women in this group expressed satisfaction with the balance between their career and family life. (See box for respondents' comments.)

Comments from consultants with accommodating relation between work and family life

“To cope you need child care and communication, organisation and planning, and energy to enjoy it. You certainly need a lot of energy, and you've got to want both aspects of life. It's enhanced my life and I'm where I want to be.” (Married, female, children; surgery)

“I didn't stay at work any longer than I had to. I was meant to go out for drinks after work with others including senior medical staff. I was meant to socialise with the team, but I didn't. As soon as my shift was finished, I was off home to my family. My family were important.” (Married, male, children; diagnostics)

Discussion

Despite reaching the pinnacle of a demanding professional career, many male consultants expressed reservations over its effect on their family and personal life. These reservations come from a generation who trained when medicine was more of a vocation and when limited personal and family life was perhaps more acceptable. Fewer reservations were expressed by the consultants (both male and female) who perceived they had a more balanced relation between their career and family life. Previous work has highlighted the changes needed in medicine.13 15 Some changes have occurred,18 19 yet we found that the expectations placed on doctors to give more of their time to their medical career than is perhaps healthy for them or their family still prevail.

Currently doctors seem to be fitting in with the system rather than the system adapting to a changing workforce and enabling doctors to have fulfilling professional and personal lives. Government policies to increase the medical workforce and implement family friendly policies should take account of the need for a fundamental change in current hospital medical culture.

Acknowledgments

We thank all the consultants who took part in this study. We also thank Professor Sara Arber for her advice and supervision during the course of this study; social scientists Gillian Carey, Suzanne Cohen, Miranda Cormell, and Juliet Essen for their help with the interviews; and Dr Jane Harrison, Dr Jane Maher, and Professor Ramirez for their comments on the drafts of this paper.

Contributors: CD was the principal investigator. She initiated the research; discussed core ideas; and participated in the design and execution of the study and in the data collection, data documentation, quality control, analysis and interpretation of the data, and writing of the paper. PL initiated the research; discussed core ideas; and participated in the protocol design, analysis and interpretation of the data, and writing of the paper. SG initiated the research; discussed core ideas; participated in the protocol design; and edited the paper. CD is guarantor for the paper.

Footnotes

  • Funding South Thames Regional Health Authority.

  • Competing interests None declared.

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