Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA.
Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2018 Apr;226(4):474-481. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2017.12.047. Epub 2018 Feb 23.
Obtaining National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding over the last 10 years has become increasingly difficult due to a decrease in the number of research grants funded and an increase in the number of NIH applications.
National Institutes of Health funding amounts and success rates were compared for all disciplines using data from NIH, Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB), and Blue Ridge Medical Institute. Next, all NIH grants (2006 to 2016) with surgeons as principal investigators were identified using the National Institutes of Health Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools Expenditures and Results (NIH RePORTER), and a grant impact score was calculated for each grant based on the publication's impact factor per funding amount. Linear regression and one-way ANOVA were used for analysis.
The number of NIH grant applications has increased by 18.7% (p = 0.0009), while the numbers of funded grants (p < 0.0001) and R01s (p < 0.0001) across the NIH have decreased by 6.7% and 17.0%, respectively. The mean success rate of funded grants with surgeons as principal investigators (16.4%) has been significantly lower than the mean NIH funding rate (19.2%) (p = 0.011). Despite receiving only 831 R01s during this time period, surgeon scientists were highly productive, with an average grant impact score of 4.9 per $100,000, which increased over the last 10 years (0.15 ± 0.05/year, p = 0.02). Additionally, the rate of conversion of surgeon scientist-mentored K awards to R01s from 2007 to 2012 was 46%.
Despite declining funding over the last 10 years, surgeon scientists have demonstrated increasing productivity as measured by impactful publications and higher success rates in converting early investigator awards to R01s.
由于受资助的研究经费数量减少,而 NIH 申请数量增加,过去 10 年来,获得美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助变得愈发困难。
使用来自 NIH、美国实验生物学会联合会(FASEB)和蓝岭医学研究所的数据,比较了所有学科的 NIH 资助金额和成功率。接下来,使用 NIH 研究组合在线报告工具支出和结果(NIH RePORTER),确定了所有作为主要研究者的外科医生的 NIH 资助(2006 年至 2016 年),并根据每笔资助金额的出版物影响因子,为每项资助计算了资助影响评分。使用线性回归和单向 ANOVA 进行分析。
NIH 资助申请数量增加了 18.7%(p=0.0009),而 NIH 资助的经费数量(p<0.0001)和 R01 数量(p<0.0001)分别下降了 6.7%和 17.0%。作为主要研究者的外科医生的资助成功概率(16.4%)明显低于 NIH 平均资助率(19.2%)(p=0.011)。尽管在这段时间内仅获得了 831 个 R01,但是外科医生科学家的成果非常丰富,平均每个资助影响评分 4.9 分,每 10 万美元(0.15±0.05/年,p=0.02)。此外,2007 年至 2012 年,外科医生科学家指导的 K 奖转为 R01 的比例为 46%。
尽管过去 10 年来资助资金不断减少,但外科医生科学家通过有影响力的出版物和更高的将早期研究员奖转为 R01 的成功率,证明了他们的生产力不断提高。