Prevention Research Center in St. Louis, Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, One Brookings Drive, Campus, Box 1196, St. Louis, MO, 63130, USA.
Department of Surgery, Division of Public Health Sciences, Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center, Washington University School of Medicine, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Implement Sci. 2020 May 11;15(1):30. doi: 10.1186/s13012-020-00994-0.
There is a continued need to evaluate training programs in dissemination and implementation (D&I) research. Scientific products yielded from trainees are an important and objective measure to understand the capacity growth within the D&I field. This study evaluates our mentored training program in terms of scientific productivity among applicants.
Post-doctoral and early-career cancer researchers were recruited and applied to the R25 Mentored Training for Dissemination and Implementation Research in Cancer (MT-DIRC) between 2014 and 2017. Using application details and publicly available bibliometric and funding data, we compared selected fellows with unsuccessful applicants (nonfellows). We extracted Scopus citations and US federal grant funding records for all applicants (N = 102). Funding and publication abstracts were de-identified and coded for D&I focus and aggregated to the applicant level for analysis. Logistic regression models were explored separately for the odds of (1) a D&I publication and (2) US federal grant funding post year of application among fellows (N = 55) and nonfellows (N = 47). Additional models were constructed to include independent variables that attenuated the program's association by 5% or more. Only US-based applicants (N = 87) were included in the grant funding analysis.
Fellows and nonfellows were similar across several demographic characteristics. Fellows were more than 3 times more likely than nonfellows to have grant funding after MT-DIRC application year (OR 3.2; 95% CI 1.1-11.0) while controlling for time since application year; the association estimate was 3.1 (95% CI 0.98-11.0) after adjusting for both cancer research area and previous grant funding. For publications, fellows were almost 4 times more likely to publish D&I-focused work adjusting for time (OR 3.8; 95% CI 1.7-9.0). This association lessened after adjusting for previous D&I publication and years since undergraduate degree (OR 2.9; 95% CI 1.2-7.5).
We document the association of a mentored training approach with built-in networks of peers to yield productive D&I researchers. Future evaluation efforts could be expanded to include other forms of longer-term productivity such as policy or practice change as additional objective measures. D&I research trainings in the USA and internationally should consider common evaluation measures.
评估传播和实施(D&I)研究培训计划仍有必要。培训生产生的科学成果是了解 D&I 领域能力增长的一个重要和客观的衡量标准。本研究从申请人的科学产出方面评估我们的导师培训计划。
2014 年至 2017 年,我们招募了博士后和早期职业癌症研究人员,并申请 R25 传播和实施癌症研究培训(MT-DIRC)。利用申请细节以及可公开获取的文献计量学和资助数据,我们将选定的研究员与不成功的申请人(非研究员)进行了比较。我们为所有申请人(N=102)提取了 Scopus 引文和美国联邦资助记录。资助和出版物摘要被去识别并编码为 D&I 重点,并汇总到申请人层面进行分析。我们分别对研究员(N=55)和非研究员(N=47)在申请年后获得 D&I 出版物和美国联邦资助的可能性进行了逻辑回归模型探索。构建了其他模型,以纳入可使项目相关性降低 5%或更多的独立变量。只有在美国的申请人(N=87)被纳入资助分析。
研究员和非研究员在几个人口统计学特征上相似。在控制申请年份后,研究员获得 MT-DIRC 申请年后资助的可能性是非研究员的 3 倍以上(OR 3.2;95%CI 1.1-11.0);调整癌症研究领域和以前的资助后,关联估计值为 3.1(95%CI 0.98-11.0)。对于出版物,研究员在调整时间后发表 D&I 重点工作的可能性几乎高出 4 倍(OR 3.8;95%CI 1.7-9.0)。调整以前的 D&I 出版物和本科毕业年限后,这种关联减弱(OR 2.9;95%CI 1.2-7.5)。
我们记录了一种导师培训方法与同行建立的网络相结合,产生有成效的 D&I 研究人员。未来的评估工作可以扩大到包括政策或实践变革等其他形式的长期生产力,作为额外的客观衡量标准。美国和国际上的 D&I 研究培训应考虑共同的评估措施。