Robinson Georgeanna F W B, Schwartz Lisa S, DiMeglio Linda A, Ahluwalia Jasjit S, Gabrilove Janice L
G.F.W.B. Robinson is assistant director, Institute for Clinical Research Education, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. L.S. Schwartz is assistant research professor, Department of Clinical Research and Leadership, and associate director of research education, training, and career development, Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Children's National Health System, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC. L.A. DiMeglio is professor of pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Section of Pediatric Endocrinology/Diabetology, Riley Hospital for Children, Indiana University School of Medicine, and director of career development, Indiana University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana. J.S. Ahluwalia is dean, School of Public Health, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey. J.L. Gabrilove is James F. Holland Professor of Medicine and Oncological Sciences and associate director of education and training, Tisch Cancer Institute; and director, Clinical Research Education Programs, and codirector, KL2 Scholars and PORTAL Programs, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, New York, New York.
Acad Med. 2016 Apr;91(4):570-82. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000979.
To understand the factors that facilitate career success for career development awardees in clinical and translational science and reconceptualize understand ing of career success for this population.
In 2013-2014, the authors conducted semistructured interviews with former NIH KL2 or K12 scholars from nine Clinical and Translational Science Award-funded institutions. Participants either had or had not secured independent funding at least two years after the end of their last K award. Questions covered the factors that facilitate or hinder junior investigators' transition to independent funding. Interviews were recorded and transcribed, and the transcripts were analyzed thematically.
Forty individuals participated, with equal representation by men and women and by independently and not independently funded investigators. Personal factors that facilitated success included networks, persistence and resilience, initiative, autonomy, and personal and professional balance. Organizational factors included appropriate mentorship, protected research time, and institutional resources and support.Even independently funded participants described challenges regarding career direction. Five participants without independent funding modeled a broad spectrum of successful career paths, having assumed leadership positions not reliant on grant funding. Alternative definitions of career success included improving public health, enjoying work, seeing mentees succeed, and receiving external acknowledgment of successes.
Awareness of the factors that facilitate or hinder career success can help junior faculty, mentors, and institutional leaders support career development in clinical and translational science. New definitions of career success are needed, as are career paths for faculty who want to engage in research in roles other than principal investigator.
了解促进临床与转化科学领域职业发展奖获得者职业成功的因素,并重新认识这一群体的职业成功。
2013年至2014年,作者对来自九个临床与转化科学奖资助机构的前美国国立卫生研究院KL2或K12学者进行了半结构化访谈。参与者在其最后一个K奖结束至少两年后,有的获得了独立资助,有的则没有。问题涵盖了促进或阻碍初级研究人员向独立资助过渡的因素。访谈进行了录音和转录,并对转录文本进行了主题分析。
40人参与,男女比例以及获得独立资助和未获得独立资助的研究人员比例均等。促进成功的个人因素包括人际关系网、毅力和适应力、主动性、自主性以及个人与职业的平衡。组织因素包括适当的指导、受保护的研究时间以及机构资源和支持。即使是获得独立资助的参与者也描述了在职业方向方面面临的挑战。五名未获得独立资助的参与者展示了广泛的成功职业道路,他们担任了不依赖资助的领导职位。职业成功的其他定义包括改善公众健康、享受工作、看到 mentees 取得成功以及获得外部对成功的认可。
了解促进或阻碍职业成功的因素有助于初级教员、导师和机构领导支持临床与转化科学领域的职业发展。需要新的职业成功定义,以及为那些想以首席研究员以外的角色从事研究的教员提供职业道路。