Faculty of Medicine, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College, P.O. Box 2240, Moshi, Tanzania.
School of Public Health and Social Sciences, the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, P.O. Box 65001, Dar-es-salaam, Tanzania.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 May 24;23(1):375. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04369-z.
Mentorship is an essential component of research capacity building for young researchers in the health sciences. The mentorship environment in resource-limited settings is gradually improving. This article describes mentees' experiences in a mentorship program for junior academicians amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Tanzania.
This is a survey study that examined the experiences of mentees who participated in a mentorship program developed as part of the Transforming Health Education in Tanzania (THET) project. The THET project was funded by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) under a consortium of three partnering academic institutions in Tanzania and two collaborating US-based institutions. Senior faculty members of respective academic institutions were designated as mentors of junior faculty. Quarterly reports submitted by mentees for the first four years of the mentorship program from 2018 to 2022 were used as data sources.
The mentorship program included a total of 12 mentees equally selected from each of the three health training institutions in Tanzania. The majority (7/12) of the mentees in the program were males. All mentees had a master's degree, and the majorities (8/12) were members of Schools/Faculties of Medicine. Most mentors (9/10) were from Tanzania's three partnering health training institutions. All mentors had an academic rank of senior lecturer or professor. Despite the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the regular weekly meetings between mentors and mentees were not affected. By the fourth year of the mentorship program, more than three-quarters of mentees had published research related to the mentorship program in a peer-reviewed journal, over half had enrolled in Ph.D. studies, and half had applied for and won competitive grant awards. Almost all mentees reported being satisfied with the mentorship program and their achievements.
The mentorship program enhanced the skills and experiences of the mentees as evidenced by the quality of their research outputs and their dissemination of research findings. The mentorship program encouraged mentees to further their education and enhanced other skills such as grant writing. These results support the initiation of similar mentorship programs in other institutions to expand their capacity in biomedical, social, and clinical research, especially in resource-limited settings, such as Sub-Saharan Africa.
指导对于健康科学领域的年轻研究人员的研究能力建设至关重要。资源有限环境中的指导环境正在逐步改善。本文描述了坦桑尼亚 COVID-19 大流行期间初级学者参加指导计划的学员的经历。
这是一项调查研究,考察了参加坦桑尼亚转化健康教育项目(THET)项目开发的指导计划的学员的经验。THET 项目由美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)资助,由坦桑尼亚的三所合作学术机构和美国的两个合作机构组成的联盟共同资助。各学术机构的资深教师被指定为初级教师的导师。2018 年至 2022 年的前四年,学员提交的季度报告被用作数据来源。
该指导计划共包括 12 名学员,他们均来自坦桑尼亚的三所健康培训机构,每个机构各有 6 名。该计划中的学员大多数(7/12)是男性。所有学员都拥有硕士学位,大多数(8/12)是医学学院/系的成员。大多数导师(9/10)来自坦桑尼亚的三所合作健康培训机构。所有导师的学术职称均为高级讲师或教授。尽管 COVID-19 大流行爆发,但导师和学员之间的定期每周会议并未受到影响。在指导计划的第四年,超过四分之三的学员在同行评议的期刊上发表了与指导计划相关的研究,超过一半的学员已注册博士研究,一半的学员已申请并获得了有竞争力的赠款奖励。几乎所有学员都对指导计划及其成果表示满意。
指导计划增强了学员的技能和经验,这体现在他们的研究成果的质量及其研究结果的传播上。该指导计划鼓励学员进一步接受教育,并增强了其他技能,如撰写赠款。这些结果支持在其他机构启动类似的指导计划,以扩大其在生物医学、社会和临床研究方面的能力,特别是在资源有限的环境中,如撒哈拉以南非洲。