key: cord-338922-wew3hety authors: Miller, Kelsey A.; Mannix, Rebekah; Schmitz, Gillian; Monuteaux, Michael C.; Lee, Lois title: Impact of COVID-19 on professional and personal responsibilities of Massachusetts physicians date: 2020-08-27 journal: Am J Emerg Med DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2020.08.051 sha: doc_id: 338922 cord_uid: wew3hety • The professional impact is more uniform but the personal impact varies by specialty & demographics. • Physicians report minimal change in employment status but half report a decrease in income. • Emergency Medicine physicians have experienced quarantining from family at a higher frequency. • Female physicians report spending more hours on child and household care and less time on selfcare. State and city-level stay-at-home orders/advisories during the COVID-19 pandemic are an essential part of the public health response. These advisories directly and indirectly impact the professional and personal lives of physicians. 1 Before the pandemic, gender differences in work-life balance were present, 2,3 and pandemic related impacts will potentially exacerbate these inequities. Physician organizations have focused on physician wellness in the face of this pandemic. To target interventions, it is important to understand the pandemic-related impacts on physician work and life. 4 This study examines changes in the professional status and personal responsibilities of physicians related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the stay-at-home advisories. This is a cross-sectional, observational study of Massachusetts emergency medicine (EM) and pediatric physicians. They were selected to characterize effects of a single state's stay-at-home advisory among physicians with different clinical impacts from COVID-19. This study was deemed exempt by the Institutional Review Board. Massachusetts re-opening. The primary outcomes were changes in work hours and income and changes in hours spent on home-related care. We calculated descriptive statistics and comparative analyses between demographic and specialty groups using the chi square or Fisher's exact test (tests two-tailed, alpha at 0.05). Analyses were performed using Stata Statistical Software v. 16.0 (Statacorp, College Station, TX). The survey was returned by 205/1640 MCAAP (13%) and 76/792 MACEP members (10%), for 281 respondents total (Table 1 ). Questions about professional and personal responsibilities were completed by 260. Most respondents reported no change in employment (96%), but 47% reported a current or anticipated decrease in income. Pediatric physicians (8%) were more likely to experience a change in their employment status compared to EM and pediatric EM (PEM) physicians (0%, p < 0.05). A minority (5%) of respondents reported being furloughed. There were no statistically significant differences by gender in changes to employment status or income. Overall, 14% of physicians quarantined from their families. EM/PEM physicians (20%) were more likely to have quarantined than pediatric physicians (8%, p < 0.05). Most physicians reported spending increased time on childcare, home schooling and household care (Figure 1 ). This was accompanied by a decrease in hours spent on their professional physician duties and on self-care. More men (28.9%) reported increased hours spent on professional responsibilities compared to women (15.9%, p=0.02). Females spent more hours on childcare and household care than males We report an early perspective of the personal and professional impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on EM and pediatric physicians. Overall there was minimal change in employment; however, half experienced income decreases. This has been reported at a practice level, but the individual level impacts are less well described. 5 There were greater personal domain effects with one in five EM/PEM physicians quarantined from their family. Our study has limitations, including the potential for responder and recall bias, generalizability with surveying EM and pediatric physicians in one state, and the limited response rate. Our study supports concerns for increased professional gender disparities during the pandemic stayat-home advisory, 2 including fewer scientific publication submissions by women compared to men. 6 These may be due in part to the hypothesized differential effects of school closures on women. 7 In our study, female physicians invested more time in child and household care and less time on selfcare and professional responsibilities, compared to men. Awareness of gender-specific impacts is important or we risk continuing to exacerbate gender disparities in wage and leadership. Understanding these effects is also important to inform targeted efforts to support physician wellness and mitigate the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on physicians. Supporting the Health Care Workforce during the COVID-19 Global Epidemic Doctoring While Woman Women Physicians and the COVID-19 Pandemic Areas of academic research with the impact of COVID-19 Immediate and long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on delivery of surgical services The decline of women's research production during the coronavirus pandemic | Nature Index COVID-19: the gendered impacts of the outbreak