J Neurosurg. 2021 Jul 23;136(1):295-305. doi: 10.3171/2021.1.JNS203824. Print 2022 Jan 1.
International research fellows have been historically involved in academic neurosurgery in the United States (US). To date, the contribution of international research fellows has been underreported. Herein, the authors aimed to quantify the academic output of international research fellows in the Department of Neurosurgery at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Research fellows with Doctor of Medicine (MD), Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), or MD/PhD degrees from a non-US institution who worked in the Hopkins Department of Neurosurgery for at least 6 months over the past decade (2010-2020) were included in this study. Publications produced during fellowship, number of citations, and journal impact factors (IFs) were analyzed using ANOVA. A survey was sent to collect information on personal background, demographics, and academic activities.
Sixty-four international research fellows were included, with 42 (65.6%) having MD degrees, 17 (26.6%) having PhD degrees, and 5 (7.8%) having MD/PhD degrees. During an average 27.9 months of fellowship, 460 publications were produced in 136 unique journals, with 8628 citations and a cumulative journal IF of 1665.73. There was no significant difference in total number of publications, first-author publications, and total citations per person among the different degree holders. Persons holding MD/PhDs had a higher number of citations per publication per person (p = 0.027), whereas those with MDs had higher total IFs per person (p = 0.048). Among the 43 (67.2%) survey responders, 34 (79.1%) had nonimmigrant visas at the start of the fellowship, 16 (37.2%) were self-paid or funded by their country of origin, and 35 (81.4%) had mentored at least one US medical student, nonmedical graduate student, or undergraduate student.
International research fellows at the authors' institution have contributed significantly to academic neurosurgery. Although they have faced major challenges like maintaining nonimmigrant visas, negotiating cultural/language differences, and managing self-sustainability, their scientific productivity has been substantial. Additionally, the majority of fellows have provided reciprocal mentorship to US students.
国际研究学者在历史上一直参与美国(美国)的神经外科学术研究。迄今为止,对国际研究学者的贡献的报道还不够。在此,作者旨在量化约翰霍普金斯大学医学院神经外科系国际研究学者的学术成果。
本研究纳入了过去十年(2010-2020 年)在霍普金斯神经外科系工作至少 6 个月的、来自非美国机构的、拥有医学博士(MD)、哲学博士(PhD)或 MD/PhD 学位的研究学者。使用方差分析分析了研究期间的出版物数量、引用次数和期刊影响因子(IF)。发送了一份调查,以收集个人背景、人口统计学和学术活动的信息。
共纳入 64 名国际研究学者,其中 42 名(65.6%)拥有 MD 学位,17 名(26.6%)拥有 PhD 学位,5 名(7.8%)拥有 MD/PhD 学位。在平均 27.9 个月的研究期间,共发表了 460 篇论文,发表在 136 种独特的期刊上,引用次数为 8628 次,累积期刊 IF 为 1665.73。不同学位持有者之间的总出版物数量、第一作者出版物数量和每人总引用次数没有显著差异。拥有 MD/PhD 的人每人每篇论文的引用次数更高(p=0.027),而拥有 MD 的人每人的总 IF 更高(p=0.048)。在 43 名(67.2%)的调查回复者中,34 名(79.1%)在研究开始时持有非移民签证,16 名(37.2%)自费或由原籍国资助,35 名(81.4%)指导过至少一名美国医学生、非医学研究生或本科生。
作者所在机构的国际研究学者对神经外科学术研究做出了重大贡献。尽管他们面临着维持非移民签证、协商文化/语言差异和管理自给自足等重大挑战,但他们的科学生产力仍然很高。此外,大多数研究员为美国学生提供了互惠指导。