Kuhn Andrew W, Inclan Paul M, Brogan David M, Aleem Alexander W, Brophy Robert H
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri.
JB JS Open Access. 2023 Jan 12;8(1). doi: 10.2106/JBJS.OA.22.00072. eCollection 2023 Jan-Mar.
Scholarship and research are important aspects of orthopaedic surgery training. Many orthopaedic surgery residency programs have developed dedicated research curricula, often culminating in a capstone thesis project with the intended goal of peer-reviewed publication. However, data on the success of these programs are scarce. The purpose of the current study was to determine the success rate and time to publication of resident research thesis projects at our own institution while evaluating factors associated with these outcomes.
Resident research thesis projects performed over the past 15 years were aggregated and reviewed. Additional data regarding the projects and former trainees who performed them were collected using public resources which included measures of current academic aptitude (i.e., H-index and number of publications) as well as project and publication characteristics. Cox and linear regression analyses were conducted to assess the relation between numerous predictor variables and the success and time to publication. All analyses were conducted at the 95% confidence interval (CI) level.
Sixty-eight (n = 68; 83%) resident research thesis projects were published an average of 2,582.8 days, or roughly 7 years from the start of their residency training. Graduate adjusted H-index was associated with increased success and decreased time to publication (hazard ratio 1.183 [95% CI: 1.059-1.322], p = 0.003). A lower journal impact factor was associated with taking significantly shorter time to reach publication ((1,66) = 7.839, p = 0.007; Β = 146.45, p = 0.007). Study type (clinical vs. laboratory), posttraining practice setting (academic vs. private), and whether the research topic was within the same area of the trainee's matched fellowship(s) did not predict publication success.
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: Over the past 15 years, 83% of orthopaedic resident research thesis projects at our institution were published. A higher adjusted H-index was associated with greater completion and faster timing to publication. A lower journal impact factor was also associated with quicker publication. These data highlight the publication metrics of a formalized resident research program and identify factors associated with success and timing of publication.
学术研究是骨科手术培训的重要方面。许多骨科手术住院医师培训项目都制定了专门的研究课程,通常以一篇顶点论文项目告终,目标是在同行评审期刊上发表。然而,关于这些项目成功率的数据却很稀少。本研究的目的是确定我们机构住院医师研究论文项目的成功率和发表时间,同时评估与这些结果相关的因素。
汇总并审查过去15年进行的住院医师研究论文项目。使用公共资源收集有关这些项目及实施项目的 former trainees 的其他数据,这些资源包括当前学术能力的衡量指标(即H指数和发表数量)以及项目和发表的特征。进行Cox回归分析和线性回归分析,以评估众多预测变量与发表成功率和发表时间之间的关系。所有分析均在95%置信区间(CI)水平上进行。
68项(n = 68;83%)住院医师研究论文项目平均在2582.8天发表,即从住院医师培训开始约7年后发表。研究生调整后的H指数与更高的成功率和更短的发表时间相关(风险比1.183 [95% CI:1.059 - 1.322],p = 0.003)。较低的期刊影响因子与显著更短的发表时间相关((1,66) = 7.839,p = 0.007;Β = 146.45,p = 0.007)。研究类型(临床与实验室)、培训后实践环境(学术与私立)以及研究主题是否与受训者匹配的 fellowship 领域相同,均不能预测发表成功率。
讨论/结论:在过去15年中,我们机构83%的骨科住院医师研究论文项目得以发表。更高的调整后H指数与更高的完成率和更快的发表时间相关。较低的期刊影响因子也与更快的发表相关。这些数据突出了正式住院医师研究项目的发表指标,并确定了与发表成功率和发表时间相关的因素。