Research Division, Hospital for Special Surgery, 535 East 70th Street, New York, NY, 10021, USA.
Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, 1300 York Ave, New York, NY, 10021, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2023 Nov 23;23(1):898. doi: 10.1186/s12909-023-04869-y.
Submitting research abstracts to scientific societies is expected in academic medicine and requires dedicated time and effort. The authors queried mentors and mentees to ascertain what topics and proposed strategies should be included in a new curriculum to enhance the abstract submission process.
Between May 2019 and March 2020, the authors enrolled 14 senior-rank mentors from diverse disciplines at a tertiary musculoskeletal center and their 14-paired mentees (mostly residents and fellows) into a several-component qualitative study consisting of in-depth interviews several months before abstract submission addressing prior experiences, and longitudinal follow-up interviews 1 month before, 1 week before, and 1 week after submission to uncover challenges faced during the actual process and strategies that were effective in overcoming these challenges. Additional contacts occurred through November 2020 to ascertain outcomes of submissions. Mentors and mentees were unaware of each other's responses. Responses were grouped into categories using grounded theory and a comparative analytic strategy.
At enrollment participants recounted details from prior abstracts that included experiences with the submission process such as format, content, and online requirements, and experiences with interpersonal interactions such as managing coinvestigators' competing priories and consulting with statisticians in a timely manner. Benefits of submitting abstracts included advancing mentees' careers and increasing research methodology rigor. Challenges encountered during the submission process included meeting deadlines before all data were acquired, time away from other responsibilities, and uncertainty about handling changing conclusions as more data accrued. Delayed feedback from coinvestigators and broadening the scope or changing the focus of the abstract compounded the time crunch to meet the submission deadline. At the time of abstract submission mentor-mentee pairs agreed that major challenges were dealing with collaborators, incomplete data/limited results, and different work styles. The authors developed a proposal for a comprehensive curriculum to include organizational, technical and interpersonal topics.
This longitudinal qualitative study involving mentor-mentee pairs revealed multiple benefits and challenges associated with submitting research abstracts. These findings provide the foundation for a comprehensive curriculum to enhance this recurring labor-intensive undertaking and cornerstone of academic medicine.
在学术医学中,向科学学会提交研究摘要预计是一项需要投入时间和精力的任务。作者向导师和学员询问,以确定新课程应包含哪些主题和建议策略,以增强摘要提交过程。
在 2019 年 5 月至 2020 年 3 月期间,作者从一家三级肌肉骨骼中心的多个学科招募了 14 名高级导师及其 14 对学员(主要是住院医师和研究员)参与一项由几个组成部分组成的定性研究,包括在提交摘要前几个月进行的深入访谈,主题是之前的经验,以及在提交前 1 个月、前 1 周和后 1 周进行的纵向随访访谈,以揭示实际过程中面临的挑战以及克服这些挑战的有效策略。在 2020 年 11 月之前,通过额外的联系来确定提交的结果。导师和学员不知道彼此的回答。使用扎根理论和比较分析策略将回答分为几类。
在参与时,参与者详细描述了之前的摘要经验,包括提交过程的格式、内容和在线要求,以及与合著者的优先级竞争和及时咨询统计人员等人际互动的经验。提交摘要的好处包括推进学员的职业发展和提高研究方法的严谨性。在提交过程中遇到的挑战包括在获得所有数据之前满足截止日期、从其他职责中抽出时间,以及随着更多数据的积累,不确定如何处理不断变化的结论。来自合著者的延迟反馈和扩大摘要的范围或改变重点加剧了满足提交截止日期的时间压力。在提交摘要时,导师-学员对认为主要挑战是处理合作者、不完整的数据/有限的结果和不同的工作风格。作者提出了一个全面课程的建议,包括组织、技术和人际关系主题。
这项涉及导师-学员对的纵向定性研究揭示了提交研究摘要相关的多个益处和挑战。这些发现为增强这一再度需要投入大量劳动的任务提供了基础,也是学术医学的基石。