Verma Vivek, Burt Lindsay, Gimotty Phyllis A, Ojerholm Eric
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Nebraska, Omaha, Nebraska.
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2016 Nov 15;96(4):915-918. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2016.08.005. Epub 2016 Aug 11.
To test the hypothesis that recent resident research productivity might be different than a decade ago, and to provide contemporary information about resident scholarly activity.
We compiled a list of radiation oncology residents from the 2 most recent graduating classes (June 2014 and 2015) using the Association of Residents in Radiation Oncology annual directories. We queried the PubMed database for each resident's first-authored publications from postgraduate years (PGY) 2 through 5, plus a 3-month period after residency completion. We abstracted corresponding historical data for 2002 to 2007 from the benchmark publication by Morgan and colleagues (Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2009;74:1567-1572). We tested the null hypothesis that these 2 samples had the same distribution for number of publications using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. We explored the association of demographic factors and publication number using multivariable zero-inflated Poisson regression.
There were 334 residents publishing 659 eligible first-author publications during residency (range 0-17; interquartile range 0-3; mean 2.0; median 1). The contemporary and historical distributions were significantly different (P<.001); contemporary publication rates were higher. Publications accrued late in residency (27% in PGY-4, 59% in PGY-5), and most were original research (75%). In the historical cohort, half of all articles were published in 3 journals; in contrast, the top half of contemporary publications were spread over 10 journals-most commonly International Journal of Radiation Oncology • Biology • Physics (17%), Practical Radiation Oncology (7%), and Radiation Oncology (4%). Male gender, non-PhD status, and larger residency size were associated with higher number of publications in the multivariable analysis.
We observed an increase in first-author publications during training compared with historical data from the mid-2000s. These contemporary figures may be useful to medical students considering radiation oncology, current residents, training programs, and prospective employers.
检验近期住院医师研究生产力可能与十年前不同这一假设,并提供有关住院医师学术活动的当代信息。
我们使用放射肿瘤学住院医师协会年度名录,编制了最近两届(2014年6月和2015年)毕业的放射肿瘤学住院医师名单。我们在PubMed数据库中查询了每位住院医师从研究生第二年(PGY)到第五年以及住院医师培训结束后3个月期间的第一作者发表的文章。我们从Morgan及其同事的基准出版物(《国际放射肿瘤学•生物学•物理学》2009年;74:1567 - 1572)中提取了2002年至2007年的相应历史数据。我们使用Wilcoxon秩和检验来检验这两个样本在发表文章数量上具有相同分布的零假设。我们使用多变量零膨胀泊松回归来探讨人口统计学因素与发表文章数量之间的关联。
334名住院医师在住院医师培训期间发表了659篇符合条件的第一作者文章(范围0 - 17;四分位间距0 - 3;均值2.0;中位数1)。当代和历史分布存在显著差异(P <.001);当代发表率更高。文章在住院医师培训后期积累(PGY - 4占27%,PGY - 5占59%),且大多数是原创研究(75%)。在历史队列中,所有文章的一半发表在3种期刊上;相比之下,当代发表文章数量排名前半的文章分布在10种期刊上 - 最常见的是《国际放射肿瘤学•生物学•物理学》(17%)、《实用放射肿瘤学》(7%)和《放射肿瘤学》(4%)。在多变量分析中,男性、非博士身份和更大的住院医师培训规模与发表文章数量较多相关。
与21世纪中期的历史数据相比,我们观察到培训期间第一作者发表文章数量有所增加。这些当代数据可能对考虑从事放射肿瘤学的医学生、现任住院医师、培训项目和潜在雇主有用。