国家学术麻醉研究所(NIAA)研究资助:对受奖人特征和初步资助产出进行分析。

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Naomi Watson, Gudrun Kunst
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:国家学术麻醉研究所(NIAA)是英国学术麻醉和围手术期医学的主要资助机构。它每年有两轮拨款。自2019年以来,通过广泛使用的在线平台收集研究成果,从而能够评估资助影响。我们研究的目的是报告资助奖励和获奖者的特征,包括平等、多样性和包容性(EDI)数据。方法:我们对获奖者提交的NIAA资助数据(2019-2023)进行了回顾性分析,并评估了自2022年以来收集的所有申请人和接受者的EDI特征。主要目标是按地域分布、机构类型和研究类别评估赠款。次要目标包括初步拨款产出和申请人及得奖者的电子数据交换特点。结果:在2019年至2023年期间,共发放了63笔赠款,总额为2,488,857英镑。资助在英国和爱尔兰分布良好,伦敦的研究小组获得的资助最多(n = 16,25%),获得825,591英镑(占总资助的33%)。大学附属机构获得38笔赠款(60%),而25笔赠款(40%)授予教学医院和非教学医院。按研究类型划分,临床前研究占资助的41% (n = 26),其次是临床观察性研究(24%,n = 15)、临床介入性研究(14%,n = 9)和流行病学研究(13%,n = 8)。20位主要研究者在30个期刊上发表了51篇论文,共被引用1723次,平均每篇论文被引用17次。超过一半(n = 28,55%)的论文发表在影响因子为7或更高的期刊上。大多数申请者是白人异性恋男性,但没有EDI特征与申请成功显著相关。结论:NIAA资助具有地域多样性,支持的研究类型广泛。大多数受资助的研究都发表在高影响力的期刊上。然而,在申请者中,无论是成功的还是不成功的,都明显缺乏多样性。未来的NIAA战略应侧重于增加资助申请人的多样性和代表性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia (NIAA) research grants: analysis of awardee characteristics and preliminary grant outputs.

Background: The National Institute of Academic Anaesthesia (NIAA) is a major UK-based funder of academic anaesthesia and perioperative medicine. It holds two grant rounds per year. Since 2019, research outputs have been collected via a widely used online platform, enabling assessment of grant impact. The aim of our study was to report the characteristics of funding awards and awardees, including equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) data.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of NIAA grant data submitted by award holders (2019-2023) and assessed EDI characteristics for all applicants and recipients, collected since 2022. The primary objective was to assess grants by geographical distribution, type of institutions and research category. Secondary objectives included preliminary grant outputs and EDI characteristics of applicants and awardees.

Results: Between 2019 and 2023, 63 grants totalling £2,488,857 were awarded. Grants were well-distributed across the UK and Ireland, with London-based research groups receiving the most (n = 16, 25%) and securing £825,591 (33% of total funding). University-affiliated institutions received 38 grants (60%), while 25 grants (40%) were awarded to teaching and non-teaching hospitals. By research type, pre-clinical studies received 41% of funding (n = 26), followed by clinical observational (24%, n = 15), clinical interventional (14%, n = 9), and epidemiological studies (13%, n = 8). Fifty-one publications have been reported by 20 principal investigators across 30 journals, with a total of 1723 citations and a median of 17 citations per paper. More than half (n = 28, 55%) were published in journals with an impact factor of 7 or higher. Most applicants were white, heterosexual males, but no EDI characteristic was significantly associated with application success.

Conclusion: NIAA grants were geographically diverse and supported a broad range of research types. Most funded research was published in high-impact journals. However, a notable lack of diversity was observed among applicants, both successful and unsuccessful. Future NIAA strategies should focus on increasing diversity and representation among grant applicants.

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