| Literature DB >> 26380103 |
Trevor W Lambert1, Fay Smith1, Michael J Goldacre1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To report on doctors' reasons, as expressed to our research group, for choosing academic careers and on factors that would make a career in clinical academic medicine more attractive to them.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical academic; career choice; medical education; medical faculty; workforce
Year: 2015 PMID: 26380103 PMCID: PMC4562380 DOI: 10.1177/2054270415602644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JRSM Open ISSN: 2054-2704
Frequency distribution of coded comments[a] made by senior doctors about academic work (N = 124[b]): 1999 and 2000 cohorts surveyed in 2012.
| Theme | Male ( | Female ( | Percentage of commenters ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time for academic work/study leave | 14 | 18 | 32 | 26 |
| Support/supervision/mentor/advice | 9 | 17 | 26 | 21 |
| Work-life balance/women academics | 6 | 18 | 24 | 19 |
| Enjoy academic work | 14 | 7 | 21 | 17 |
| Career structure/job security | 12 | 8 | 20 | 16 |
| Access to teaching/quality of teaching | 11 | 9 | 20 | 16 |
| Academic pressures/targets | 9 | 9 | 18 | 15 |
| Working abroad | 8 | 6 | 14 | 11 |
| Funding | 6 | 6 | 12 | 10 |
| Academic/clinical balance | 5 | 5 | 10 | 8 |
| Pay | 3 | 4 | 7 | 6 |
| Portfolio careers | 3 | 4 | 7 | 6 |
| Other | 2 | 3 | 5 | 4 |
Some doctors gave more than one reason and we counted each reason.
Number of doctors who commented upon academic issues, not the number of commenting doctors (N = 1327).
p < 0.05; Significance tests comparing men and women.
Examples of reasons for choosing a long-term career in clinical academic medicine, 1996 cohort (numbers of male and female respondents[a] raising each theme in parentheses).
| Personal | |
|---|---|
| Enjoyment, satisfaction, interest (36, 35) | Academic work is challenging, interesting and rewarding (male, nephrology) |
| Intellectually stimulating (36, 34) | Intellectually more challenging with the ability to have more creative ideas and encouraged to be free thinking (female, nephrology) |
| Enjoy academia (8,3) | Interested in research. Prefer University life (male, oral and maxillofacial surgery) |
| Research | |
| Enjoy research (23,20) | Enjoy asking (and answering) clinically-relevant research questions (female, microbiology) |
| Advancing medicine, improving care (13, 17) | Important, fulfilling, interesting, opportunity to influence policy and health at a population level (female, public health) Find research vital to providing a good service to my patients (female, radiotherapy and oncology) |
| Collaboration (5, 3) | Curiosity, opportunity to collaborate & be exposed to alternate views/approaches (male, psychiatry) |
| Teaching | |
| Enjoy teaching (12, 20) | Teaching keeps you learning. Important to pass on experiences (female, general practice) |
| Interest in medical education (4,5) | Desire to be more involved with medical education (both in delivery and planning) (female, nephrology) Opportunity for medical education research (female, nephrology) |
| Keeping up to date (7, 12) | It informs my clinical practice, keeps me informed and up to date (female, general practice) |
| The job | |
| Variety (13, 5) | To keep variety in my job (female, general practice) |
| Autonomy, less routine (12, 5) | Self-determination, i.e. personal control of work and environment (male, ophthalmology) |
| Better than just clinical work/NHS (30, 14)b | More challenging & interesting. Less ‘routine’ work/less boring/variability in work (female, academic, specialty not given) |
| Better career prospects, security (11, 8) | More opportunities in USA for British trained clinicians with an academic base (male, anaesthetics) |
| Better hours, less pressure (12, 23) | More compatible with family life – more reliable time commitments (female, immunology) |
There were 83 male and 77 female respondents. Some doctors gave more than one reason and we counted each reason, hence numbers of themes exceed numbers of respondents.
Significant male–female difference on ‘Better than just clinical work/NHS’, χ21 = 4.87, p < 0.05.
Percentage distribution of changes to clinical academic medicine which would have made it a more attractive career option[a], by gender – 1996 cohort surveyed in 2007.
| Main categories | Sub-categories | Male ( | Female ( | Commenters ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Working conditions | Better pay | 18.2 | 14.2 | 16.0 |
| Flexible working hours, PT posts | 2.0 | 10.8 | 6.8 | |
| More support, mentors, PAs | 2.8 | 3.9 | 3.4 | |
| Working in medicine | Better funding/job security | 16.6 | 9.0 | 12.5 |
| Less pressure: publishing/grants/ethics | 8.7** | 3.7 | 6.1 | |
| Improve academic image/reality | 5.0* | 2.4 | 3.6 | |
| Prefer teaching | 1.7 | 1.9 | 1.8 | |
| Clinical work | Prefer clinical/patient contact | 6.5 | 8.4 | 7.6 |
| Easier to fit with clinical work | 5.2 | 6.9 | 6.2 | |
| More clinical research[ | 1.1 | 0.6 | 0.8 | |
| Opportunity | More/better research training | 4.4 | 5.4 | 4.9 |
| Better career pathway | 6.3** | 2.6 | 4.3 | |
| More information/career guidance | 2.8** | 7.9 | 5.5 | |
| Availability of posts, including locally | 10.5 | 8.2 | 9.3 | |
| Protected time for research | 4.1 | 3.7 | 3.9 | |
| Would not consider/ | Not interested | 5.2 | 7.3 | 6.4 |
| had not considered | Too abstract, I'm not academic | 1.5 | 2.1 | 1.8 |
| No or never considered | 33.1 | 35.1 | 34.3 | |
| Tried and didn’t like | 0.7* | 2.6 | 1.7 | |
| Other | Other | 1.5 | 1.9 | 1.7 |
Some doctors gave more than one reason and we counted each reason.
Due to low numbers Chi-test could not be carried out for this statement.
p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05. Significance tests, comparing men and women: ‘Flexible working hours, PT posts’ (χ21 = 29.5, p < 0.001), ‘Better funding/job security’ posts’ (χ21 = 12.4, p < 0.001), ‘Less pressure: publishing/grants/ethics’ posts’ (χ21 = 9.99, p < 0.01), ‘Improve academic image/reality’ (χ21 = 4.0, p < 0.05), ‘Better career pathway’ (χ21 = 7.4, p < 0.01), ‘More information/career guidance’ (χ21 = 10.9, p < 0.01), ‘Tried and don’t like’ (χ21 = 4.5, p < 0.05).
Examples of changes to clinical academic medicine which would make it a more attractive career option, 1996 cohort.
| Working conditions | |
|---|---|
| Better pay | Clinical academia medicine must pay well. People have families. Academia must be respected and paid well. Plumbers get UKP60 an hour. Does society accept lower pay for the academics? – I don`t ( |
| Flexible working hours, PT posts | Ability to work part-time – seems difficult as a woman to combine a family/maternity leave with an academic career ( |
| More support, mentors, PAs | Better research supervision & encouragement. Good role models ( |
| Better funding/job security | Academic medicine and the prospect of applying for grants from charitable bodies and industry fill me with dread: Funding of NHS clinical research would make this more attractive ( |
| Less pressure: publishing/grants/ethics | After doing my PhD (which I really enjoyed) I made the difficult decision to not pursue an academic career as the university demands on publishing and research output cannot be reconciled with a consultant job doing a reasonable amount of on-going clinical activity of any quality within the NHS. The 50–50 job is no longer tenable ( |
| Improve academic image/reality | I have no interest in churning out unreadable serum rhubarb studies that change nothing ( |
| Prefer teaching | If I could get into this branch of medicine without an MD an obligation to research. I would love to teach only ( |
| Prefer clinical/patient contact | I have not chosen academic medicine as a career as I love patient contact. As much as I love teaching, I would miss patients if I engaged in more teaching ( |
| Easier to fit with clinical work | I would like the opportunity to work in an environment that offers the opportunity for half-time clinical, half-time academic, but the pressures of providing a clinical service preclude this ( |
| More clinical research | Most research did not seem that clinically relevant to me at earlier stages in my career when I might have pursued it ( |
| More/better research training | Better training in research methodology ( |
| Better career pathway | More structured career path. I have done a PhD in order to gain entry to SpR [specialist registrar] grade but found it extremely difficult to continue research ( |
| More information/career guidance | A career plan explained to me at an earlier stage ( |
| Availability of posts, including locally | Location. It is difficult to work in academia whilst living in a rural area ( |
| Protected time for research | More freedom from clinical duties to engage in research ( |
| Not interested | Has never interested me (not a completer finisher!) ( |
| Too abstract, I'm not academic | I would not choose clinical academic medicine because I just lack the level of intellectual rigour required. I find the process of writing grant applications unutterably tedious ( |
| No or never considered | Not explored it as an option ( |
| Tried and don’t like | I enjoy making diagnoses and stabilising sick patients. I find research dull, (though I've done a lot in the past) and rarely related to my clinical practice ( |
| Other | A stronger research base in anaesthetics would have made me more likely to consider it. At present there are very few strong academic departments in the UK ( |
| Ref. | Quotation |
|---|---|
| M1 | ‘too little flexibility to allow people to develop specialist skills or academic interests – hence the reason for me taking unpaid leave to complete my thesis’ (medical specialties) |
| F2 | ‘I am an employed consultant with only 1 SPA – as are all newly employed consultants in [named place]. I am therefore not involved in teaching, audit, research etc. and cannot foresee a time when I will be’ (anaesthetist) |
| M3 | ‘1 session per week for combined Research/Admin/Teaching/Study did not allow for the degree of development I had hoped’ (surgeon) |
| F4 | ‘I get time and funding for professional development. I get time (in work) to go to meetings, run committees, teach, do audit and research and supervise trainee projects’ (anaesthetist) |
| M5 | ‘[I] have benefited from great advice and support from key, senior colleagues’ (clinical academic, clinical oncology) |
| F6 | ‘it would be great to have a mentor outside my rotation who can advise me regarding my academic/clinical career and also how to combine that with having a family’ (clinical academic, public health) |
| M7 | ‘lacked good advice/mentoring in terms of planning research or subsequent steps to get a good consultant post’ (medical specialties) |
| F8 | ‘I love being a doctor but if I knew the personal and family sacrifices my husband (who is a surgeon) and I have made since qualification I doubt I would have chosen this profession. The relentless pursuit of jobs, research to get decent name for yourself, moving house and fellowships my husband has had to do has impacted hugely on my career and our family life’ (general practice) |
| F9 | ‘juggling full-time work and child care is all consuming with little time for extras to improve one’s CV. An organised rota with protected admin/study/research time as I had at [named hospital] is great and enabled me to make a successful fellowship application and produce publications. This is in contrast to [named hospital] where I worked previously, the rota was shambolic and consultants un-supportive’ (medical specialties) |
| F10 | ‘a lack of mentorship for women in academic medicine…this seems relevant now that I have a child. It is always stunning to me how women are greatly underrepresented in the higher echelons of academia and now that I have my own sights on such positions I wonder how difficult it will be to “break through”. Already find it very tricky with clinical training/academic demands’ (clinical academic, psychiatry) |
| F11 | ‘fighting to get an honorary NHS contract’ for a year and found it ‘difficult working very long hours in general medicine while pregnant – feel that this made me quite ill. Research funding is very competitive and difficult to get if working part-time (e.g. MRC/Wellcome intermediate fellowships)’ (pathologist) |
| M12 | ‘I spent 3 years in research and did an international fellowship which I believe greatly helped me personally and in my training’ (urologist) |
| M13 | ‘I enjoy my work very much and would only consider changing jobs if my funding dried up!’ (clinical academic, oncology) |
| M14 | ‘I have always been very keen on being a clinical academic and have enjoyed my research time doing a PhD. Subsequently there have been essentially two reasons that I have ended up taking a [hospital] consultant job rather than looking to continue down an academic path. Firstly job security and the uncertainty of academia. Secondly the scarcity of consultant jobs in respiratory medicine. Academia is exciting and challenging and I feel that I was doing well in academia and had support from several senior academics for my career. However the lack of job security prevented me from continuing when I have a young family and a large mortgage’ (respiratory medicine). |
| M15 | ‘[I am] moving towards an academic career but the obstacles are huge compared with [the] NHS route and plenty of interested colleagues have given up on academia and taken an NHS job – I have stuck with it but at some personal cost’ (aspiring clinical academic, medical specialties) |
| M16 | ‘I am lucky that my path as a clinical academic has been a) supported by a strong research/clinical research institution and b) fortunate with fellowship awards’ (clinical academic, psychiatry). |
| M17 | ‘trying to develop a post-PhD research career while undertaking clinical duties was very challenging’ (clinical academic, medical specialties). |
| M18 | ‘I have greatly enjoyed my research experience so far, but remain undecided if I want a lifelong academic career or if I would prefer to be a NHS clinician with an active interest in research’ (clinical academic, medical specialties). |
| F19 | ‘educated myself out of employment in the place I would prefer to live, at the moment both remuneration & security suggest that we are punished for taking a higher degree rather than rewarded’ (academic clinical oncologist) |
| M20 | ‘poor access to protected teaching whilst working’ (paediatrician) |
| M21 | ‘few consultants have a good understanding of good teaching/training practice. In 7 years I only had 1 year of a meaningful “Learning Agreement” process’ (surgery) |
| F22 | ‘senior registrars reaching senior positions having worked fewer hours and having experienced less’ (anaesthetist) |
| F23 | ‘very concerned about the future threat to reduce SPA time significantly. Fear I will have to use that time to meet CPD [Continuing Professional Development] requirements and may have to give up other roles such as teaching’ (radiologist) |
| M24 | ‘we went in to this to be clinicians, not to be paper churners…most of the measures have nothing to do with diagnosis or treatment. [The lay public] do not care that I have written a thesis on some minutiae in medicine that will be outdated soon’ (surgery) |
| M25 | ‘I spent 3 years in postgraduate research which has been completely unhelpful to my career and the trend for postgraduate higher degrees should be closely looked at’ (surgery) |
| M26 | ‘work life balance in the US is strongly balanced towards work. However, academic medicine is strongly encouraged’ (surgery) |
| F27 | ‘opportunities for research funding in my speciality are very limited in the UK’ (medical specialties) |
| M28 | ‘as a husband and father of 3 children, with a healthy interesting job on offer here, with the opportunity to teach and direct research, I can offer my family some stability without having to commute around the country and so for the time being, staying in Australia is the better option’ (surgeon) |
| F29 | ‘study leave is capped at £600 a year which doesn’t cover even the essential recommended courses’ (clinical academic, medical specialties) |
| M30 | ‘to obtain funding for a PhD in medical education despite having done an academic training fellowship, having done research in education, having a relevant master’s degree and having been an active member of ASME [the Association for the Study of Medical Education]’ (General Practitioner) |
| M31 | ‘I feel the UK is very poor in its support for anything other than service delivery development, and pays only lip service to the obligations of our profession to training or academic pursuit’ (surgery) |
| F32 | ‘on paper, I am being given a great opportunity to progress in research and to work less than full time, but in reality, I am being given a heavy burden of clinical duties to cover a poorly staffed ward’ (clinical academic, clinical pharmacology) |
| F33 | ‘Skills are required now that weren’t required when I first started training and doctors need working knowledge of very different things in order to function effectively as consultants. It is now very difficult to find the time in a job plan to do all the things I would like to, and was previously encouraged to do, such as teach and do research’ (paediatrics) |
| M34 | ‘there are very few post-doctoral fellowships that would allow consultant pay-scale and this has forced me to take on a full NHS post without an honorary university contract in order to still have some grounding for my academic pursuits’ (medical specialties) |
| F35 | ‘embarrassed [by] how little I earn at my level of training. Currently in clinical research managing a large trial budget (£2 million). Huge level of responsibility and earning £35,000. My husband financially supports my career choice and relocated his life based on where I'm based. A career in hospital/academic medicine is just not sustainable as paid so little’ (medical specialties) |
| M36 | PhD salaries and the balance between work and family life are much better in Denmark than in the UK. Although choosing a PhD is not normally financially motivated, a higher salary [while doing a doctorate] in the UK would help!’ (other medical) |
| M37 | ‘the flexibility of this non-training grade has allowed an acceptable work/life balance & also the development of a ‘portfolio' style career involving a large commitment to teaching & medicine writing. Having obtained a PhD before entering medicine I plan to reduce my clinical work & move into academic research/teaching over the next few years’ (emergency medicine) |
| M38 | ‘various pieces of work that are all inter-related: academia and clinical, but also writing books, journalism, live performances etc. on medical and scientific issues. At any time there are various pulls in each direction but I doubt I’d ever leave any of those roles completely’ (clinical academic, psychiatry). |