Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California; Department of Biomedical Data Science, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
J Surg Educ. 2022 Jul-Aug;79(4):855-860. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2022.02.008. Epub 2022 Mar 7.
Academic productivity is an increasingly important asset for trainees pursuing academic careers. Medical schools and graduate medical education programs offer structured research programs, but providing longitudinal and individualized health services research education remains challenging. Whereas in basic science research, members at multiple training levels support each other within a dedicated community (the laboratory), health services research projects frequently occur within individual faculty-trainee relationships. An optimal match of expertise, availability, and interest may be elusive for an individual mentor-mentee pair. We aimed to share our experience building Surgeons Writing about Trauma (SWAT), a trainee-led research community that propels academic productivity by facilitating peer collaboration and opportunities to transition into independent researchers. We highlight challenges of health services research for trainees, present how structured mentorship and a peer community can address this challenge, and detail SWAT's operational structure to guide replication at peer institutions.
学术成果对于从事学术职业的受训者来说是一项日益重要的资产。医学院和研究生医学教育项目提供了结构化的研究项目,但提供纵向和个性化的卫生服务研究教育仍然具有挑战性。在基础科学研究中,多个培训层次的成员在一个专门的社区(实验室)中相互支持,而卫生服务研究项目通常发生在个别教师-受训者关系中。对于一个导师-受训者来说,找到合适的专业知识、可用性和兴趣的匹配可能并不容易。我们旨在分享我们建立外科医生创伤写作(SWAT)的经验,这是一个由受训者领导的研究社区,通过促进同行合作和过渡到独立研究人员的机会,推动学术成果。我们强调了卫生服务研究对受训者的挑战,介绍了结构化的指导和同行社区如何解决这一挑战,并详细介绍了 SWAT 的运作结构,以指导在同行机构的复制。