Literature DB >> 28953562

Meeting the Late-Career Needs of Faculty Transitioning Through Retirement: One Institution's Approach.

Joanna M Cain1, Marianne E Felice, Judith K Ockene, Robert J Milner, John L Congdon, Stephen Tosi, Luanne E Thorndyke.   

Abstract

PROBLEM: Medical school faculty are aging, but few academic health centers are adequately prepared with policies, programs, and resources (PPR) to assist late-career faculty. The authors sought to examine cultural barriers to successful retirement and create alignment between individual and institutional needs and tasks through PPR that embrace the contributions of senior faculty while enabling retirement transitions at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, 2013-2017. APPROACH: Faculty 50 or older were surveyed, programs at other institutions and from the literature (multiple fields) were reviewed, and senior faculty and leaders, including retired faculty, were engaged to develop and implement PPR. Cultural barriers were found to be significant, and a multipronged, multiyear strategy to address these barriers, which sequentially added PPR to support faculty, was put in place. A comprehensive framework of sequenced PPR was developed to address the needs and tasks of late-career transitions within three distinct phases: pre-retirement, retirement, and post-retirement. OUTCOMES: This sequential introduction approach has led to important outcomes for all three of the retirement phases, including reduction of cultural barriers, a policy that has been useful in assessing viability of proposed phased retirement plans, transparent and realistic discussions about financial issues, and consideration of roles that retired faculty can provide. NEXT STEPS: The authors are tracking the issues mentioned in consultations and efficacy of succession planning, and will be resurveying faculty to further refine their work. This framework approach could serve as a template for other academic health centers to address late-career faculty development.

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 28953562     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001905

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  2 in total

1.  Retiring From Pediatric Emergency Medicine Too Soon?: A Survey to Discover the Reasons and Start a Conversation About Solutions.

Authors:  Bharati Beatrix Bansal; Matthew Sunil Mathew; Quiera Booker-Nubie; Sarah E Messiah; Vincent J Wang
Journal:  Pediatr Emerg Care       Date:  2022-03-14       Impact factor: 1.602

2.  Career transitions: Reflections of former chairs and academic health center leaders.

Authors:  David N Bailey; L Maximilian Buja; Avrum I Gotlieb; Deborah E Powell; Fred Sanfilippo
Journal:  Acad Pathol       Date:  2022-08-09
  2 in total

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