51. Research Funding, Income, and Career Satisfaction Among Clinician-Scientists in Ophthalmology in the United States
- Author
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Rajesh C. Rao, Nicholas J. Protopsaltis, Alexander M. Rusakevich, Glenn Yiu, and Daniel L. Chao
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,Cross-sectional study ,Clinical Sciences ,education ,Demographic data ,Ophthalmology & Optometry ,Institutional support ,Job Satisfaction ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Ophthalmology ,Research Support as Topic ,medicine ,Humans ,Salary ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,health care economics and organizations ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,0303 health sciences ,Extramural ,Middle Aged ,Career satisfaction ,Health Surveys ,humanities ,United States ,Laboratory Personnel ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Median time ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Income ,Job satisfaction ,Female ,Clinical Medicine ,Psychology - Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to characterize clinician-scientists in ophthalmology and identify factors associated with successful research funding, income, and career satisfaction.DesignCross-sectional study.MethodsA survey was conducted of clinician-scientists in ophthalmology at US academic institutions between April 17, 2019, and May 19, 2019. Collected information including 1) demographic data; 2) amount, type, and source of startup funding; first extramural grant; and first R01-equivalent independent grant; 3) starting and current salaries; and 4) Likert-scale measurements of career satisfaction were analyzed using multivariate regression.ResultsNinety-eight clinician-scientists in ophthalmology were surveyed across different ages (mean: 48 ± 11 years), research categories, institutional types, geographic regions, and academic ranks. Median startup funding ranged from $50-99k, and median starting salaries ranged from $150-199k. A majority of investigators (67%) received their first extramural award from the National Eye Institute, mainly through K-award mechanisms (82%). The median time to receiving their first independent grant was 8 years, mainly through an R01 award (70%). Greater institutional startup support (P=.027) and earlier extramural grant success (P=.022) were associated with earlier independent funding. Male investigators (P=.001) and MD degreed participants (P=.008) were associated with higher current salaries but not starting salaries. Overall career satisfaction increased with career duration (P=.011) but not with earlier independent funding (P=.746) or higher income (P=.300).ConclusionsSuccess in research funding by clinician-scientists in ophthalmology may be linked to institutional support and earlier acquisition of extramural grants but does not impact academic salaries. Nevertheless, career satisfaction among clinician-scientists improves with time, which is not necessarily influenced by research or financial success.
- Published
- 2020