Analysis of the workforce and workplace for rheumatology and the research activities of rheumatologists early in their careers
- PMID: 20737466
- DOI: 10.1002/art.27721
Analysis of the workforce and workplace for rheumatology and the research activities of rheumatologists early in their careers
Abstract
Objective: To assess the workforce and workplace in rheumatology, and the research work of early-career rheumatologists.
Methods: Early-career rheumatologists were defined as practicing physicians who joined the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) in 1991-2005, were 49 years of age or younger when they joined, and reside in North America. This cohort participated in a Web-based survey distributed by the ACR. A total of 247 surveys (21.2% response) were used for this analysis. Survey questions were designed to obtain core insights about the workforce, workplace, research activities, funding, and the demographic profile of respondents.
Results: Respondents from all workplaces-clinical, academic, federal, and industry-engaged in clinical care, teaching, administration, and research. The time devoted to these tasks was employer dependent, and workplaces shaped the scale and scope of research. Patient-oriented research was predominant across all workplaces. Disease, population, and translational research were intermediate, and few respondents pursued basic or prevention-oriented research in any type of workplace. Rheumatologists obtained extramural funds (21.3%) and intramural funds (78.7%) to pay portions of their salaries for time spent on research. Receiving a National Institutes of Health K08/K23 award was associated with receipt of a federal research project grant (P < 0.001). Respondents associated investigative work with reduced earnings, a perception validated by an estimated drop in pre-tax annual earnings of 2.3% for each half-day/week dedicated to research (P < 0.01).
Conclusion: The results of this study justify interventions for closing gaps embedded in investigational rheumatology. These include improved funding for clinical research, increasing the number of K08/K23 awards, and recruiting rheumatologists from underrepresented demographic groups.
Copyright © 2010 by the American College of Rheumatology.
Comment in
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The research-based rheumatologist: strategies to remove the species from the endangered list.Arthritis Rheum. 2010 Dec;62(12):3522-3. doi: 10.1002/art.27718. Arthritis Rheum. 2010. PMID: 20737469 No abstract available.
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