资源和结构对儿科重症监护奖学金学术生产力的影响。

IF 1.9 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Andrew G Smith, Danny Castro, Caroline Andy, Angela S Czaja, Donald L Boyer, Erika L Abramson, Pnina Weiss, Richard B Mink
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:儿科重症医学(PCCM)奖学金结构在不同的项目中差异很大,自2006年以来没有进行过检查。学术知识和技能的发展是奖学金培训的重要组成部分。然而,最优的PCCM奖学金结构,使研究员的学术生产力是未知的。目的:研究PCCM研究时间结构和资源,以更好地了解其与学术生产力的关系。方法:这是对PCCM奖学金项目主任的横断面调查数据的二次分析。我们将高产项目定义为那些在过去5年中超过75%的研究员发表了他们的学术项目论文的项目。分析调查了学术生产力与专门的学术时间、项目资源和障碍之间的关系。结果:65位PCCM研究员中有49位(75%)完成了调查。只有20%的研究人员报告说,超过75%的研究人员发表了他们学术项目的论文。总学术活动时间中位数为16个月(四分位数范围为10-18个月)。花在学术活动上的总时间与高生产率的课程无关。在资源和障碍中,只有T32培训补助金与高效项目有关。结论:我们发现分配给学术活动的时间与PCCM奖学金的高学术生产力之间没有关系。因此,希望提高研究员学术生产力的项目不应该仅仅依赖于提供更多的学术活动时间。除了T32培训补助金,我们评估的具体资源或障碍与生产力无关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of Resources and Structure on Scholarly Productivity in Pediatric Critical Care Fellowship.

Background: Pediatric critical care medicine (PCCM) fellowship structures vary widely among programs and have not been examined since 2006. The development of scholarly knowledge and skills is an important part of fellowship training. However, the optimal PCCM fellowship structure to enable fellows' scholarly productivity is unknown. Objective: We examined PCCM fellowship time structure and resources to better understand their association with scholarly productivity. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of cross-sectional survey data from PCCM fellowship program directors. We defined highly productive programs as those in which greater than 75% of fellows published papers from their scholarly projects in the previous 5 years. Analyses investigated the association of scholarly productivity with dedicated scholarship time and program resources and barriers. Results: Forty-nine of 65 PCCM fellowships (75%) completed the survey. Only 20% of fellowships reported that greater than 75% of fellows published papers from their scholarly projects. Median total scholarly activity time was 16 months (interquartile range, 10-18 mo). The total amount of time devoted to scholarly activity was not associated with highly productive programs. Among resources and barriers, only T32 training grants were associated with highly productive programs. Conclusion: We found no relationship between time allocated to scholarly activity and high scholarly productivity in PCCM fellowships. Hence, programs that wish to increase fellows' scholarly productivity should not rely solely on providing more time for scholarly activity. Aside from T32 training grants, no specific resource or barrier that we evaluated is related to productivity.

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