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. 2016 Nov;27(11):871-879.
doi: 10.1089/hum.2016.154.

Enhancing Graduate and Postdoctoral Education To Create a Sustainable Biomedical Workforce

Affiliations

Enhancing Graduate and Postdoctoral Education To Create a Sustainable Biomedical Workforce

Cynthia N Fuhrmann. Hum Gene Ther. 2016 Nov.

Abstract

PhD-trained biomedical scientists are moving into an increasingly diverse variety of careers within the sciences. However, graduate and postdoctoral training programs have historically focused on academic career preparation, and have not sufficiently prepared trainees for transitioning into other scientific careers. Advocates for science have raised the concern that the collective disregard of the broader career-development needs for predoctoral and postdoctoral trainees could drive talent away from science in upcoming generations. A shift is occurring, wherein universities are increasingly investing in centralized career development programs to address this need. In this Perspective, I reflect on the movement that brought biomedical PhD career development to the spotlight in recent years, and how this movement has influenced both the academic biomedical community and the field of career development. I offer recommendations for universities looking to establish or strengthen their career development programs, including recommendations for how to develop a campus culture that values career development as part of pre- and postdoctoral training. I also suggest steps that faculty might take to facilitate the career development of their mentees, regardless of the mentee's career aspirations. Finally, I reflect on recent national efforts to incentivize innovation, evaluation, and research in the field of biomedical PhD career development, and propose actions that the scientific community can take to support biomedical career development further as a scholarly discipline. These investments will enable new approaches to be rigorously tested and efficiently disseminated to support this rapidly growing field. Ultimately, strengthening biomedical career development will be essential for attracting the best talent to science and helping them efficiently move into careers that will sustain our nation's scientific enterprise.

Keywords: career development; graduate education; postdoctoral training; professional development; workforce.

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Conflict of interest statement

Author Disclosure The author is a co-author of myIDP and a member of the myIDP Advisory Board.

Figures

<b>Figure 1.</b>
Figure 1.
Today's biomedical PhD trainees seek to enter a diverse array of research and research-related career paths. To address this reality, universities are reassessing how to encourage early career planning and how to facilitate trainees' development of skills, knowledge, experience, and a professional network in their career path of choice. Trainees' career development can be achieved in synchrony with thesis and postdoctoral research, benefiting both the academic and research missions of the university.

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