| Literature DB >> 27448563 |
Emil L Fosbøl1, Philip L Fosbøl2, Sofie Rerup1, Lauge Østergaard1, Mohammed H Ahmed1, Jawad Butt1, Julie Davidsen1, Nirusiya Shanmuganathan1, Simon Juul1, Christian Lewinter3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We studied the scientific yield of the medical PhD program at all Danish Universities.Entities:
Keywords: Danish PhD schools; Medical degree; Medicine; Observational study; Peer-reviewed publications; PhD; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27448563 PMCID: PMC4958408 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0713-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1Study design
Baseline characteristics of Danish PhD graduates
| Total | University of Copenhagen | University of Southern Denmark | University of Aarhus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 2686 | 1258 | 281 | 1147 |
| Female gender, N (%) | 1424 (53.0 %) | 694 (55.2 %) | 134 (47.7 %) | 599 (52.3 %) |
| Median age, years (IQR) | 35 (32–38) b | 33 (31–36) | 33 (31–36) | 36 (34–49) a |
| Year of graduation, N (%) | ||||
| 1995–1999 | 401 (14.9 %) | 203 (16.1 %) | 40 (14.2 %) | 158 (13.8 %) |
| 2000–2004 | 717 (26.7 %) | 300 (23.9 %) | 92 (32.7 %) | 325 (28.3 %) |
| 2005–2009 | 799 (29.8 %) | 389 (30.9 %) | 74 (26.3 %) | 336 (29.3 %) |
| 2010–2013 | 769 (28.6 %) | 366 (29.1 %) | 75 (26.7 %) | 328 (28.6 %) |
| PhD specialty, % | ||||
| Medicine | 87.3 % | 89.1 % | 89.3 % | 84.8 % |
| Surgery | 12.7 % | 10.9 % | 11.7 % | 15.2 % |
| Median duration of PhD, y (IQR) | 4.0 (3.5–4.6) | 4.0 (3.5–4.6) | 4.3 (3.7–5.1) | --- |
| Most productive departments, N (%) | ||||
| Cardiology | 294 (11.0 %) | 151 (12.0 %) | 24 (8.9 %) | 119 (10.4 %) |
| Endocrinology | 273 (10.2 %) | 117 (9.3 %) | 36 (13.3 %) | 120 (10.5 %) |
| Neurology | 189 (7.1 %) | 94 (7.5 %) | 8 (3.0 %) | 87 (7.6 %) |
| Gynecology/obstetrics | 134 (5.0 %) | 73 (5.8 %) | 6 (2.2 %) | 53 (4.6 %) |
aage at graduation
bcalculated including the Aarhus data, where the age is at graduation and not at enrollment
Follow-up time and number of publications
| Total | University of Copenhagen | University of Southern Denmark | University of Aarhus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median post-graduate follow-up, y (IQR) | 6.9 (3.0-11.7) | 6.6 (3.0-11.5) | 8.0 (3.0-12.1) | 6.9 (2.9-11.7) |
| Median no. of total publications (IQR) | 9 (5–18) | 11 (6–19) | 11 (5–19) | 8 (4–15) |
| Median no. of publications post-graduate (IQR) | 7 (3–14) | 5 (2–11) | 11 (5–19) | 8 (5–16) |
| Median no. of total publications per year (IQR) | 1.12 (0.61-1.99) | 1.17 (0.66-2.04) | 1.02 (0.60-1.99) | 1.05 (0.55-1.91) |
| Median no. of post-graduate publications per year (IQR) | 1.32 (0.58-3.01) | 1.09 (0.43-2.29) | 1.92 (1.00-4.14) | 1.60 (0.70-3.65) |
Fig. 2Percent of PhD graduates with >0, >1, >2, or >3 published papers per year as a function of time in relation to time of PhD-graduation (time 0)
Fig. 3Percent of PhD graduates with an annual published paper, an annual first- or last-author paper, and a last-author paper as a function of time in relation to time of PhD-graduation (time 0)
Characteristics of Danish PhD graduates according to future research activity vs. inactivity
| Continued active | Inactive | |
|---|---|---|
| N, % of total population | 282 (10.5 %) | 2404 (89.5 %) |
| Female gender, N (%) | 118 (41.8 %) | 1306 (54.4 %) |
| Median age, years (IQR) | 34 (32–37) | 35 (32–38) |
| PhD specialty, % | ||
| Medicine | 88.3 % | 87.2 % |
| Surgery | 11.7 % | 12.8 % |
| University,% | ||
| Copenhagen | 36.5 % | 48.0 % |
| Southern Denmark | 9.2 % | 10.6 % |
| Aarhus | 54.3 % | 41.4 % |
Fig. 4Time to inactivity (=1 year without publication) by Danish Universities. Differences between universities were tested with the Log-rank test and the P value was 0.13