Feld, Lauren D.Sarkar, MonikaAu, Jennifer S.Flemming, Jennifer A.Gripshover, JanetKardashian, AniMuir, Andrew J.Nephew, LaurenOrloff, Susan L.Terrault, NorahRabinowitz, LorenVolerman, AnnaArora, VineetFarnan, JeanneVilla, EricaMonika2024-03-012024-03-012023-08-28Feld LD, Sarkar M, Au JS, et al. Parental leave, childcare policies, and workplace bias for hepatology professionals: A national survey. Hepatol Commun. 2023;7(9):e0214. Published 2023 Aug 28. doi:10.1097/HC9.0000000000000214https://hdl.handle.net/1805/38984Background: The presence of workplace bias around child-rearing and inadequate parental leave may negatively impact childbearing decisions and sex equity in hepatology. This study aimed to understand the influence of parental leave and child-rearing on career advancement in hepatology. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of physician members of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) was distributed through email listserv in January 2021. The 33-item survey included demographic questions, questions about bias, altering training, career plans, family planning, parental leave, and work accommodations. Results: Among 199 US physician respondents, 65.3% were women, and 83.4% (n = 166) were attendings. Sex and racial differences were reported in several domains, including paid leave, perceptions of bias, and child-rearing. Most women (79.3%) took fewer than the recommended 12 paid weeks of parental leave for their first child (average paid leave 7.5 wk for women and 1.7 for men). A majority (75.2%) of women reported workplace discrimination, including 83.3% of Black and 62.5% of Hispanic women. Twenty percent of women were asked about their/their partners' pregnancy intentions or child-rearing plans during interviews for training. Women were more likely to alter career plans due to child-rearing (30.0% vs. 15.9%, p = 0.030). Women were also more likely to delay having children than men (69.5% vs.35.9%). Conclusions: Women reported sex and maternity bias in the workplace and during training interviews, which was more frequently experienced by Black and Hispanic women. As two-thirds of women had children during training, it is a particularly influential time to reevaluate programmatic support to address long-term gender disparities in career advancement.en-USAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 InternationalGastroenterologyParental leavePregnancyChild careParental leave, childcare policies, and workplace bias for hepatology professionals: A national surveyArticle