1. Engagement in research among pediatric subspecialists at the time of enrollment in maintenance of certification, 2009-2016.
- Author
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Macy ML, Van KD, Leslie LK, and Freed GL
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Time Factors, Workload, Biomedical Research trends, Pediatricians trends, Pediatrics trends, Research Personnel trends, Specialty Boards
- Abstract
Background: Amid concerns about the pediatrician-scientist workforce, we hypothesized that declining numbers of pediatric subspecialists devote at least 25% of their professional time to research with fewer younger and female pediatricians engaged in research over the study period., Methods: Board-certified pediatricians enrolling online in the American Board of Pediatrics (ABP's) Maintenance of Certification (MOC) program October 2009 through 2016 were invited to complete a survey with questions about the allocation of their professional time. Responses from individuals in the 14 ABP-certified subspecialties were analyzed. The number and proportions of respondents devoting 25-49% and 50% or more of professional time to research were calculated over time. Age and gender were also examined., Results: We analyzed 21,367 responses over 8 years. A small number of pediatric subspecialists engaged in research with 5.2-6.7% devoting 25-49% and 5.6-8.4% at least 50% of their professional time to research across subspecialties. There was no discernable increase or decrease over time or pattern by age or gender., Conclusion: Less than 10% of pediatric medical subspecialists devote at least 50% of their professional time to research. Efforts to promote research among pediatric subspecialists have not increased the size of the population that reports engaging in research at this level.
- Published
- 2020
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