Franceschi Ana M, Rosenkrantz Andrew B
Department of Radiology, New York University School of Medicine, NYU Langone Medical Center, 660 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016.
Department of Radiology, New York University School of Medicine, NYU Langone Medical Center, 660 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016.
Acad Radiol. 2017 Sep;24(9):1162-1168. doi: 10.1016/j.acra.2017.02.018. Epub 2017 May 18.
This study aimed to characterize recent National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for diagnostic radiology departments at US medical schools.
This retrospective study did not use private identifiable information and thus did not constitute human subjects research. The public NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools Expenditure and Results system was used to extract information regarding 887 NIH awards in 2015 to departments of "Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology." Internet searches were conducted to identify each primary investigator (PI)'s university web page, which was used to identify the PI's departmental affiliation, gender, degree, and academic rank. A total of 649 awards to diagnostic radiology departments, based on these web searches, were included; awards to radiation oncology departments were excluded. Characteristics were summarized descriptively.
A total of 61 unique institutions received awards. The top five funded institutions represented 33.6% of all funding. The most common institutes administering these awards were the National Cancer Institute (29.0%) and the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (21.6%). Women received 15.9% of awards and 13.3% of funding, with average funding per award of $353,512 compared to $434,572 for men. PhDs received 77.7% of all awards, with average funding per award of $457,413 compared to $505,516 for MDs. Full professors received 51.2% of awards (average funding per award of $532,668), compared to assistant professors who received 18.4% of awards ($260,177). Average funding was $499,859 for multiple-PI awards vs. $397,932 for single-PI awards. Common spending categories included "neurosciences," "cancer," "prevention," and "aging."
NIH funding for diagnostic radiology departments has largely been awarded to senior-ranking male PhD investigators, commonly at large major academic medical centers. Initiatives are warranted to address such disparities and promote greater diversity in NIH funding among diagnostic radiology investigators.
本研究旨在描述美国医学院诊断放射科近期获得的美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助情况。
本回顾性研究未使用个人可识别信息,因此不构成人体受试者研究。利用公共的NIH研究项目在线报告工具支出与结果系统,提取2015年授予“放射诊断/肿瘤学”系的887项NIH资助的相关信息。通过互联网搜索确定每位主要研究者(PI)的大学网页,以此确定PI的所属部门、性别、学位和学术职称。基于这些网页搜索,共纳入了649项授予诊断放射科的资助;排除授予放射肿瘤学系的资助。对相关特征进行了描述性总结。
共有61家不同机构获得了资助。获得资助最多的前五家机构占所有资助的33.6%。管理这些资助的最常见机构是国立癌症研究所(29.0%)和国立生物医学成像与生物工程研究所(21.6%)。女性获得了15.9%的资助和13.3%的资金,每项资助的平均资金为353,512美元,而男性为434,572美元。博士获得了所有资助的77.7%,每项资助的平均资金为457,413美元,而医学博士为505,516美元。正教授获得了51.2%的资助(每项资助的平均资金为532,668美元),相比之下,助理教授获得了18.4%的资助(260,177美元)。多项PI资助的平均资金为499,859美元,而单项PI资助为397,932美元。常见的支出类别包括“神经科学”“癌症”“预防”和“衰老”。
NIH对诊断放射科的资助主要授予了高级别的男性博士研究者,这些研究者通常来自大型主要学术医疗中心。有必要采取措施解决此类差异,促进NIH在诊断放射学研究者中资助的多样性。