Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland Office of Medical Education, 288 Herston Road, Brisbane, 4006, Queensland, Australia.
The University of Queensland, Translational Research Institute, Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Woolloongabba, Australia.
BMC Med Educ. 2017 Dec 8;17(1):242. doi: 10.1186/s12909-017-1081-2.
Clinician-scientists are in decline worldwide. They represent a unique niche in medicine by bridging the gap between scientific discovery and patient care. A national, integrated approach to training clinician-scientists, typically programs that comprise a comprehensive MD-PhD pathway, are customary. Such a pathway is lacking in Australia. The objective was to gather perceptions from Australian medical students on factors they perceive would influence their decision to pursue clinician-scientist training.
A cross-sectional mixed methods design used quantitative and qualitative questions in an online self-report survey with medical students from a four-year MD program. Quantitative measures comprised scaled response questions regarding prior experience and current involvement in research, and short- and long-term opinions about factors that influence their decisions to undertake a research higher degree (RHD) during medical school. Qualitative questions gathered broader perceptions of what a career pathway as a clinician-scientist would include and what factors are most conducive to a medical student's commitment to MD-PhD training.
Respondents (N = 418; 51% female) indicated Time, Funding and Pathway as the major themes arising from the qualitative data, highlighting negative perceptions rather than possible benefits to RHD training. The lack of an evident Pathway was inter-related to Time and Funding. Themes were supported by the quantitative data. Sixty percent of students have previous research experience of varying forms, and 90% report a current interest, mainly to improve their career prospects.
The data emphasise the need for an MD-PhD pathway in Australia. A model that provides an early, integrated, and exclusive approach to research training pathways across all stages of medical education is suggested as the best way to rejuvenate the clinician-scientist. A national pathway that addresses factors influencing career decision making throughout the medical education continuum should include an appropriate funding structure, and provide early and continuing advice and mentoring. It should be flexible, gender equitable, and include post-graduate training. The implications of implementing MD-PhD programs represent a substantial investment. However this should not be a deterrent to Australia's commitment to an MD-PhD pathway, but rather a challenge to help ensure our future healthcare is guided by highly trained and competent clinician-scientists.
临床科学家在全球范围内逐渐减少。他们在科学发现和患者护理之间架起了桥梁,代表了医学领域的一个独特领域。培养临床科学家的国家综合方法通常是指包括综合医学博士-哲学博士途径的计划。在澳大利亚,这种途径并不存在。目的是从澳大利亚医学生那里收集他们认为会影响他们决定接受临床科学家培训的因素的看法。
使用四年制医学博士课程的医学生在线自我报告调查中的定量和定性问题,采用横断面混合方法设计。定量测量包括关于先前研究经验和当前参与研究的量表回答问题,以及关于影响他们在医学院期间攻读研究型高等学位(RHD)的短期和长期意见。定性问题更广泛地收集了作为临床科学家的职业途径将包括哪些内容,以及哪些因素最有利于医学生对医学博士-哲学博士培训的承诺的看法。
受访者(N=418;51%为女性)表示,时间、资金和途径是定性数据中出现的主要主题,突出了对 RHD 培训的负面看法,而不是可能的好处。缺乏明显的途径与时间和资金有关。主题得到了定量数据的支持。60%的学生有不同形式的先前研究经验,90%的学生报告目前有兴趣,主要是为了提高他们的职业前景。
数据强调澳大利亚需要医学博士-哲学博士途径。建议采用一种早期、综合和排他性的方法,在医学教育的所有阶段提供研究培训途径,这是重振临床科学家的最佳途径。一个贯穿整个医学教育连续体的职业决策影响因素的国家途径应包括适当的资金结构,并提供早期和持续的建议和指导。它应该具有灵活性、性别平等,并包括研究生培训。实施医学博士-哲学博士课程的影响代表了大量投资。然而,这不应成为澳大利亚对医学博士-哲学博士途径的承诺的障碍,而应是一个挑战,以确保我们未来的医疗保健由经过高度培训和有能力的临床科学家指导。