Department of Surgery, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Orange.
Department of Surgery, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, California.
JAMA Surg. 2024 Nov 1;159(11):1252-1260. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2024.3390.
Because mentorship is critical for professional development and career advancement, it is essential to examine the status of mentorship and identify challenges that junior surgical faculty (assistant and associate professors) face obtaining effective mentorship.
To evaluate the mentorship experience for junior surgical faculty and highlight areas for improvement.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This qualitative study was an explanatory sequential mixed-methods study including an anonymous survey on mentorship followed by semistructured interviews to expand on survey findings. Junior surgical faculty from 18 US academic surgery programs were included in the anonymous survey and interviews. Survey responses between "formal" (assigned by the department) vs "informal" (sought out by the faculty) mentors and male vs female junior faculty were compared using χ2 tests. Interview responses were analyzed for themes until thematic saturation was achieved. Survey responses were collected from November 2022 to August 2023, and interviews conducted from July to December 2023.
Mentorship from formal and/or informal mentors.
Survey gauged the availability and satisfaction with formal and informal mentorship; interviews assessed broad themes regarding mentorship.
Of 825 survey recipients, 333 (40.4%) responded; 155 (51.7%) were male and 134 (44.6%) female. Nearly all respondents (319 [95.8%]) agreed or strongly agreed that mentorship is important to their surgical career, especially for professional networking (309 respondents [92.8%]), career advancement (301 [90.4%]), and research (294 [88.3%]). However, only 58 respondents (18.3%) had a formal mentor. More female than male faculty had informal mentors (123 [91.8%] vs 123 [79.4%]; P = .003). Overall satisfaction was higher with informal mentorship than formal mentorship (221 [85.0%] vs 40 [69.0%]; P = .01). Most male and female faculty reported no preferences in gender or race and ethnicity for their mentors. When asked if they had good mentor options if they wanted to change mentors, 141 (47.8%) responded no. From the interviews (n = 20), 6 themes were identified, including absence of mentorship infrastructure, preferred mentor characteristics, and optimizing mentorship.
Academic junior surgical faculty agree mentorship is vital to their careers. However, this study found that few had formal mentors and almost half need more satisfactory options if they want to change mentors. Academic surgical programs should adopt a framework for facilitating mentorship and optimize mentor-mentee relationships through alignment of mentor-mentee goals and needs.
由于指导对于专业发展和职业晋升至关重要,因此必须检查指导的现状,并确定初级外科教员(助理教授和副教授)在获得有效指导方面面临的挑战。
评估初级外科教员的指导经验,并强调需要改进的领域。
设计、设置和参与者:这是一项定性研究,采用解释性顺序混合方法研究,包括关于指导的匿名调查,然后进行半结构化访谈以扩展调查结果。来自美国 18 个学术外科项目的 18 名初级外科教员参与了匿名调查和访谈。使用 χ2 检验比较了“正式”(由部门指定)与“非正式”(由教员寻求)导师之间以及男性与女性初级教员之间的调查答复。对访谈答复进行分析以确定主题,直到达到主题饱和度。调查答复于 2022 年 11 月至 2023 年 8 月收集,访谈于 2023 年 7 月至 12 月进行。
正式和/或非正式导师的指导。
调查评估了正式和非正式导师的可用性和满意度;访谈评估了指导方面的广泛主题。
在 825 名调查收件人中,有 333 名(40.4%)做出了回应;155 名(51.7%)为男性,134 名(44.6%)为女性。几乎所有受访者(319 [95.8%])都同意或强烈同意指导对他们的外科职业很重要,尤其是在专业网络(309 名受访者 [92.8%])、职业发展(301 名受访者 [90.4%])和研究(294 名受访者 [88.3%])方面。然而,只有 58 名受访者(18.3%)有正式导师。与男性教员相比,更多女性教员有非正式导师(123 [91.8%] 与 123 [79.4%];P = .003)。与正式指导相比,非正式指导的总体满意度更高(221 [85.0%] 与 40 [69.0%];P = .01)。大多数男性和女性教员表示,他们对导师的性别、种族和民族没有偏好。当被问及如果他们想更换导师,是否有好的导师选择时,141 名(47.8%)受访者回答否。从访谈(n = 20)中确定了 6 个主题,包括缺乏指导基础设施、理想导师的特征和优化指导。
学术初级外科教员同意指导对他们的职业至关重要。然而,这项研究发现,很少有正式导师,如果他们想更换导师,几乎一半人需要更令人满意的选择。学术外科项目应采用促进指导的框架,并通过调整导师-学员目标和需求来优化导师-学员关系。