Karmanos Cancer Center, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan.
Wayne State University College of Education, Detroit, Michigan.
Radiat Res. 2020 Aug 1;194(2):188-190. doi: 10.1667/RADE-20-00117.1.
An important hallmark of the field of radiation oncology has traditionally been multidisciplinary collaboration among its clinicians and scientists. Increased specialization, resulting from increased complexity, threatens to diminish this important characteristic. This article evaluates the success of a short-term educational environment developed specifically to enhance multidisciplinary collaboration. This NIH-funded educational course, named "Integration of Biology and Physics into Radiation Oncology (IBPRO)," was developed at Wayne State University, and designed to facilitate engagement among radiation oncologists, medical physicists and radiobiologists in activities that foster collaborative investigation. The question we address here is, "Did it work?" The 240 clinicians and researchers participating in IBPRO over the five years of the course were surveyed to quantify its effectiveness. In total, 95 respondents identified 45 institutional protocols, 52 research grant applications (19 of which have been funded thus far), 94 research manuscripts and 106 research presentations as being attributable to participation in IBPRO. The majority (66%) of respondents reported generating at least one of these research metrics attributable to participation in IBPRO, and these participants reported an average of nearly five such quantitative research metrics per respondent. This represents a remarkable contribution to radiation oncology research within a relatively short period through an intervention involving a relatively small number of radiation oncology professionals. Nearly two thirds of respondents reported ongoing collaborative working relationships generated by IBPRO. In addition, approximately 50% of respondents stated that specific information presented at IBPRO changed the way they practice, and 95% of respondents practicing in a clinical setting stated that, since participation in IBPRO, they have approached clinical dilemmas more collaboratively. Many collaborative working relationships generated by this course continue to actively drive research productivity. Additionally, one of the many enduring legacies of this course is the creation of a new debate series in a professional journal. IBPRO serves as a model for our ability to leverage collaborative learning in an educational intervention to foster multidisciplinary clinical and research collaboration. It has already had a profound impact on the profession of radiation oncology, and this impact can be anticipated to increase in the future.
放射肿瘤学领域的一个重要标志一直是其临床医生和科学家之间的多学科合作。由于复杂性的增加,专业化程度的提高威胁到这一重要特征的减弱。本文评估了专门为加强多学科合作而开发的短期教育环境的成功。这个由美国国立卫生研究院资助的教育课程名为“将生物学和物理学融入放射肿瘤学(IBPRO)”,是在韦恩州立大学开发的,旨在促进放射肿瘤学家、医学物理学家和放射生物学家之间的合作研究。我们在这里要解决的问题是,“它成功了吗?”在课程的五年中,共有 240 名临床医生和研究人员参与了 IBPRO,对其效果进行了量化。共有 95 名受访者确定了 45 项机构协议、52 项研究资助申请(其中 19 项迄今已获得资助)、94 篇研究论文和 106 项研究报告归因于参与 IBPRO。大多数(66%)受访者表示至少有一项归因于参与 IBPRO 的研究指标,这些参与者报告的每位受访者平均有近五项此类定量研究指标。通过一项涉及相对较少数量的放射肿瘤学专业人员的干预措施,在相对较短的时间内为放射肿瘤学研究做出了显著贡献。近三分之二的受访者报告说,由于 IBPRO 的参与,他们产生了持续的合作工作关系。此外,约有 50%的受访者表示,IBPRO 提出的具体信息改变了他们的实践方式,95%在临床环境中工作的受访者表示,自从参与 IBPRO 以来,他们在处理临床困境时更加合作。该课程产生的许多合作工作关系继续积极推动研究的生产力。此外,该课程的众多持久遗产之一是在专业期刊上创建了一个新的辩论系列。IBPRO 为我们在教育干预中利用协作学习来促进多学科临床和研究合作的能力提供了一个范例。它已经对放射肿瘤学专业产生了深远的影响,预计未来这种影响还会增加。