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Family Planning, Fertility, and Medical School: A Survey of Students’ Plans and Perceptions of Institutional Support

Nicole L. Vestal, Kelby Hunt, Morgan S. Levy, Maya Roytman, Alissa Mossbarger, Intira Sriprasert, Sharon A. Winer

2023The Permanente Journal12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

tests. Results The study had a total of 605 premedical and medical students respondents. Most students (78%) do not have children but plan to have children in the future. Almost two-thirds (63%) of students would consider using assisted reproductive technology. More than 80% of respondents have considered or would consider oocyte cryopreservation for themselves or their partners. A majority (95%) of students are worried about balancing parenthood and a career in medicine and about their fertility declining while they complete medical training (84%). The most frequently cited barriers to family planning during medical school and residency were: limited time off during training (84%), demands of training (82%), cost of having a child (59%), and stigma of having a child during training (45%). Less than half of medical students had formal education on infertility. Conclusions Premedical and medical students are worried about fertility declining in training and about balancing parenthood and medical careers, but gaps in knowledge and institutional support exist.

Topics & Concepts

FertilityCurriculumInfertilityFamily medicineMedical educationMedicinePopulationFamily planningCross-sectional studyMedical schoolPsychologyPregnancyPedagogyEnvironmental healthResearch methodologyPathologyBiologyGeneticsReproductive Health and TechnologiesDiversity and Career in MedicineAssisted Reproductive Technology and Twin Pregnancy
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