Ahn Jaimo, Man Li-Xing, Wanderer Jonathan, Bernstein Joseph, Iannotti Joseph P
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, 424 Stemmler Hall, 36th and Hamilton Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2008 Aug;90(8):1794-9. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.G.00460.
There is currently a severe shortage of clinician-scientists, who fill a vital role in musculoskeletal care. One way to address this shortage is to recruit more MD-PhD students into orthopaedics. We analyzed data from a national survey of MD-PhD students to assess this potential.
A total of 868 students from thirteen MD-PhD training programs were requested to fill out a multiple-choice online survey concerning their education and future goals.
We achieved a response rate of 56.7% (492 of 868). Seven (1.4%) of the 492 respondents listed orthopaedics as their primary clinical interest, and thirty (6.1%) listed it as one of their three strongest clinical interests. Among the thirty respondents, seven (23%) were senior students, five (17%) were women, and none were minorities. In comparison, 33% of the 462 respondents in the nonorthopaedic cohort were women and 12.1% were a member of a minority group (p < 0.05). Among twenty-three students who had a secondary orthopaedic interest, only one-third had a primary surgical interest. Both the thirty with a strong clinical interest in orthopaedics and the others without a strong interest in orthopaedics showed similar intent on becoming physician-scientists (a score of 2.73 and 3.30, respectively) and an interest in an academic career (90.0% and 90.3%, respectively) (p > 0.05 for both). The orthopaedic group showed significantly greater interest in clinical care as a primary activity than did the nonorthopaedic group (63.3% compared with 30.7%; p < 0.0005). Eighty-seven percent of those in the orthopaedic group reported research as their most likely primary or secondary activity.
This study suggests that there is a relatively strong interest in orthopaedic surgery (patient care and research) among MD-PhD students nationally, creating the potential to recruit approximately 100 new orthopaedic clinician-scientists every eight years (the average MD-PhD training period). Extrapolation indicates that there is the ability to double the number of orthopaedic clinician-scientists in the United States over the next fifty years. Therefore, efforts should be made to attract these students (especially women and those in underrepresented minority groups) to orthopaedic surgery. The study further suggests recruiting broadly-we should not be biased toward students late in training and just those with surgical interests.
目前临床医生 - 科学家严重短缺,他们在肌肉骨骼疾病护理中发挥着至关重要的作用。解决这一短缺的一种方法是招收更多医学博士 - 哲学博士(MD - PhD)学生进入骨科领域。我们分析了一项针对MD - PhD学生的全国性调查数据,以评估这种潜力。
来自13个MD - PhD培训项目的868名学生被要求填写一份关于他们的教育和未来目标的多项选择在线调查问卷。
我们的回复率为56.7%(868名中的492名)。在492名受访者中,有7名(1.4%)将骨科列为他们的主要临床兴趣领域,30名(6.1%)将其列为他们三个最强烈的临床兴趣领域之一。在这30名受访者中,7名(23%)是高年级学生,5名(17%)是女性,且没有少数族裔。相比之下,非骨科队列中的462名受访者中有33%是女性,12.1%是少数族裔成员(p < 0.05)。在有骨科次要兴趣的23名学生中,只有三分之一有主要的外科兴趣。对骨科有强烈临床兴趣的30名学生和其他对骨科没有强烈兴趣的学生在成为医生 - 科学家的意愿(分别为2.73分和3.30分)以及对学术职业的兴趣(分别为90.0%和90.3%)方面表现相似(两者p均> 0.05)。骨科组对将临床护理作为主要活动的兴趣明显高于非骨科组(分别为63.3%和30.7%;p < 0.0005)。骨科组中有87%的人报告研究是他们最有可能的主要或次要活动。
本研究表明,全国范围内的MD - PhD学生对骨科手术(患者护理和研究)有相对浓厚的兴趣,这为每八年(MD - PhD平均培训期)招募约100名新的骨科临床医生 - 科学家创造了潜力。推断表明,在未来五十年内,美国骨科临床医生 - 科学家的数量有能力翻倍。因此,应努力吸引这些学生(尤其是女性和少数族裔代表不足的群体)进入骨科手术领域。该研究还进一步表明应广泛招募——我们不应偏向培训后期的学生以及仅那些有外科兴趣的学生。