Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, OH.
Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, OH.
Surgery. 2020 Oct;168(4):707-713. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2020.05.022. Epub 2020 Jul 11.
The evolving landscape of academic surgery demands leaders who are not only effective clinicians and researchers, but also administrators able to navigate complex hospital organizations, financial pressures in the era of quality measures, and inclusion of an increasingly diverse workforce. The aim of this study was to characterize achievements and assess perspectives in becoming a surgical chair in order to guide young surgeons in their career trajectories to surgical leadership.
A survey encompassing demographics, surgical training, nonmedical advanced degrees, academic advancement, and leadership experiences was sent via electronic mail to members of the American College of Surgeons Society of Surgical Chairs in December 2018.
Of 191 Society of Surgical Chairs members, 52 (27.2%) completed the survey, with 6 (11.5%) women, 40 (76.9%) white, and the majority becoming chair between ages 46 and 60 (n = 39, 75.0%). Training beyond residency included fellowships (n = 41, 78.8%) and advanced nonmedical degrees (n = 15, 28.8%). Median H-index was 47 (range 10-120) with 126 (5-500) research publications, and grants received was 2 (0-38) for federal and 5 (0-43) for industry. Female chairs appear to have fewer nonmedical degrees (n = 1) and no difference in age at becoming chair (66.7% vs 79.6% between ages 46 and 60), H-index (26 [10-41] vs 49 [17-120]), or publications (93 [10-189] vs 150 [5,500]). Prior educational (n = 36, 69.2%) and clinical (n = 44, 84.6%) leadership roles were common, with 30 chairs (57.7%) having held both roles. Experiences which respondents felt have most helped them function as chair included serving as a clinical division director (n = 37, 71.2%), residency program director (n = 28, 53.8%), leadership courses (n = 28, 53.8%), a research career (n = 22, 42.3%), and being a vice/interim chair (n = 15, 28.8%). Personal traits felt to be most important in becoming a successful chair included being effective at communication (n = 37, 71.2%), collaborative (n = 35, 67.3%), trustworthy (n = 30, 57.7%), and a problem-solver (n = 27, 51.9%).
Becoming a department surgical chair often involves not only surgical subspecialty expertise, but also nonmedical training and prior leadership roles, which help facilitate development of skills integral to navigating the collaborative and diverse nature of academic surgery in the current era.
学术外科领域的不断发展要求领导者不仅要有出色的临床和研究能力,还要有能够应对复杂医院组织、质量措施时代的财务压力以及包容日益多样化的劳动力的管理能力。本研究的目的是描述成为外科主席的成就和评估观点,以指导年轻外科医生的职业轨迹,实现外科领导。
2018 年 12 月,通过电子邮件向美国外科医师学院外科主席协会的成员发送了一份涵盖人口统计学、外科培训、非医学高等学位、学术进步和领导经验的调查。
在 191 名外科主席协会成员中,有 52 名(27.2%)完成了调查,其中 6 名(11.5%)为女性,40 名(76.9%)为白人,大多数人在 46 至 60 岁之间担任主席(n=39,75.0%)。除住院医师培训外,还包括研究员培训(n=41,78.8%)和非医学高等学位(n=15,28.8%)。中位数 H 指数为 47(范围 10-120),研究出版物为 126(5-500),获得联邦政府资助 2(0-38),获得行业资助 5(0-43)。女性主席似乎拥有较少的非医学学位(n=1),担任主席的年龄没有差异(66.7%与 79.6%在 46 至 60 岁之间),H 指数(26 [10-41]与 49 [17-120])或出版物(93 [10-189]与 150 [5,500])。担任过教育(n=36,69.2%)和临床(n=44,84.6%)领导职务是很常见的,有 30 位主席(57.7%)同时担任过这两个职务。受访者认为最有助于他们担任主席的经历包括担任临床科室主任(n=37,71.2%)、住院医师项目主任(n=28,53.8%)、领导力课程(n=28,53.8%)、研究职业(n=22,42.3%)和担任副/临时主席(n=15,28.8%)。受访者认为在成为一名成功主席方面最重要的个人特质包括善于沟通(n=37,71.2%)、协作(n=35,67.3%)、值得信赖(n=30,57.7%)和解决问题(n=27,51.9%)。
成为外科主席通常不仅需要外科专业知识,还需要非医学培训和以前的领导角色,这有助于培养在当前时代应对学术外科协作和多样化性质所必需的技能。