1. Longitudinal analysis of National Institutes of Health funding for academic thoracic surgeons.
- Author
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Narahari AK, Mehaffey JH, Chandrabhatla AS, Hawkins RB, Charles EJ, Roeser ME, Lau C, and Ailawadi G
- Subjects
- Biomedical Research trends, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, National Institutes of Health (U.S.) trends, Peer Review, Research trends, Research Support as Topic trends, Surgeons trends, Thoracic Surgery trends, Thoracic Surgical Procedures trends, United States, Biomedical Research economics, National Institutes of Health (U.S.) economics, Research Support as Topic economics, Surgeons economics, Thoracic Surgery economics, Thoracic Surgical Procedures economics
- Abstract
Objective: National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding for academic (noncardiac) thoracic surgeons at the top-140 NIH-funded institutes in the United States was assessed. We hypothesized that thoracic surgeons have difficulty in obtaining NIH funding in a difficult funding climate., Methods: The top-140 NIH-funded institutes' faculty pages were searched for noncardiac thoracic surgeons. Surgeon data, including gender, academic rank, and postfellowship training were recorded. These surgeons were then queried in NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools Expenditures and Results for their funding history. Analysis of the resulting grants (1980-2019) included grant type, funding amount, project start/end dates, publications, and a citation-based Grant Impact Metric to evaluate productivity., Results: A total of 395 general thoracic surgeons were evaluated with 63 (16%) receiving NIH funding. These 63 surgeons received 136 grants totaling $228 million, resulting in 1772 publications, and generating more than 50,000 citations. Thoracic surgeons have obtained NIH funding at an increasing rate (1980-2019); however, they have a low percentage of R01 renewal (17.3%). NIH-funded thoracic surgeons were more likely to have a higher professorship level. Thoracic surgeons perform similarly to other physician-scientists in converting K-Awards into R01 funding., Conclusions: Contrary to our hypothesis, thoracic surgeons have received more NIH funding over time. Thoracic surgeons are able to fill the roles of modern surgeon-scientists by obtaining NIH funding during an era of increasing clinical demands. The NIH should continue to support this mission., (Copyright © 2021 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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