社会弱势受训者结构化辅导的早期倡议与研究,以增加临床科学家的多样性与包容性。

Humberto X Baquerizo, Steven M Munoz, Lauren S Sherman, Andrew Petryna, Valerie Fitzhugh, Diego Fraidenraich, Vincent Tsiagbe, Mariana S De Lorenzo, Pranela Rameshwar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在整合不同种族的医疗保健受训人员作为临床科学家方面存在显著滞后。虽然这一差距是公认的,但它主要集中在医师科学家,在牙科科学家和其他医疗保健领域,如医师助理计划明显滞后。我们报告了来自美国国立卫生研究院心肺血液研究所R25夏季培训项目的三组服务不足和经济条件不利的受训人员的结果,参与者来自四所罗格斯大学健康科学学院。目的:目标是通过职业发展和教育来支持临床科学家队伍的包容性。方法:通过结构化的指导、研究、职业发展和说教式讲座的早期正式培训,我们验证了这一假设,即培训生将激励他们成为临床科学家。学员从四所卫生专业学校的综合研究中学习。我们采用问卷调查的方式来评估师友、研究和职业/教育发展如何影响实习生对临床科学家职业生涯的态度。职业发展包括科学传播、指导、数据可重复性、作者身份、研究伦理和医疗机构领导模式。结果:80%的受训者继续参与同行评审出版物的研究,并有信心参与科学讨论。学员们在自信地融入其他学术领域的群体时,形成了归属感和心理安全网。在29个联系人中,87%的人回复了。不到10%的新学员表示在他们的职业规划中进行研究,而在一个夏天之后,这一比例上升到了90%。结论:总体而言,该培训计划可以作为其他计划的“蓝图”,以提高研究事业,并缩小临床科学家之间的多样性差距。临床科学家的多样性将加强医疗保健和差距,以及科学创新。成功将缩小临床科学家之间的多样性差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early Initiative of Structured Mentoring and Research for Social Disadvantage Trainees to Increase Diversity and Inclusion among Clinician Scientists.

Background: There is a significant lag in integrating ethnically diverse healthcare trainees as clinician scientists. Although this gap is acknowledged, it is mostly focused physician scientists with a marked lag in dental scientists and the other healthcare fields such as the physician assistant program. We report on the outcome of three cohorts of underserved and economically disadvantaged trainees from a National Institute of Health Heart and Lung Blood Institute R25 summer training program with participants from four Rutgers Health Science schools.

Objective: The goal was to support inclusivity within clinician scientist workforce through career development and education.

Methods: We tested the hypothesis that early formal training with structured mentoring, research, career development, and didactic lectures will inspire trainees towards careers as clinician scientists. Trainees learned from the integration of research within the four health profession schools. We used a survey to assess how mentorship, research and career/educational development influence trainees' attitude for careers as clinician scientists. Career development included science communication, mentoring, data reproducibility, authorship, ethics in research, and models of healthcare institutional leadership.

Results: >80% of the trainees continued their engagement in research with peer-reviewed publications, with confidence to engage in scientific discussion. Trainees developed a sense of belonging and a psychological safety net as they integrate with other groups of academic fields with confidence. Among 29 contacts, 87% responded. Less than 10% of incoming trainees indicated research in their career plans, which changed to >90% after one summer.

Conclusions: Overall, this training program could serve as a `blueprint' for other programs to enhance careers in research, and to narrow the diversity gap among clinician scientists. Diversity among clinician scientists will enhance healthcare and disparities, and scientific innovation. Success would narrow the diversity gap among clinician scientists.

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