| Literature DB >> 33846943 |
Anna Chang1,2, Brian S Schwartz3, Elizabeth Harleman4, Meshell Johnson5,6, Louise C Walter7,5, Alicia Fernandez8.
Abstract
Department chairs and division chiefs at research-intensive academic medical centers often find mentoring clinician educators challenging. These faculty constitute the majority of academic physicians. Supporting excellent clinician educators is key to ensuring high-quality patient care and developing tomorrow's physicians. Little has been written for leaders on strategies to advance academic clinician educators' career success. We present a framework to guide chairs, chiefs, and mentors seeking to address clinician educator retention and satisfaction in academic medical centers.Entities:
Keywords: academic medicine; clinician educator; mentoring
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33846943 PMCID: PMC8481436 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-06713-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 6.473
A Comparison of Today’s Academic Clinician Researcher vs. Academic Clinician Educator
| Career context | Career characteristic | Academic clinician researcher | Academic clinician educator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | Primary aim | Independent research expertise and funding in a focused area | Outstanding clinical and educational outcomes |
| Career motivator | To add knowledge by applying the scientific method; to leave a legacy through published work | To heal and teach by applying both art and science; to leave a legacy through other people | |
| Relevant training | Most with fellowship training that includes research methodology, grant writing, and biostatistics | Some with additional training in teaching methodology or education research. Many participate in occasional workshops or conferences | |
| Institutional | Salary support | Salary support from external sources (e.g., NIH) in highly competitive process; minor internal contribution for clinical work | Salary support from within the institution for clinical work; some from education or intramural grants |
| Time allocation | Majority time devoted to research; a protected research time often mandated by career awards | Majority time devoted to clinical care and teaching; rare funded time for scholarship | |
| Promotion expectations | Clearly defined and often rigid promotion criteria focused on grants and publications | More flexible promotion criteria with a variety of ways to demonstrate impact | |
| Dissemination strategies | Peer-reviewed manuscripts of original research | Some peer-reviewed publications of programs, curricular innovations, reviews Non-peer-reviewed chapters, books | |
| External | Career mentorship | Expected by external funders; occasionally funded mentor (e.g., K24); mutual benefit externally visible (e.g., shared publications) | Dependent on internal systems or individual initiative; often unfunded mentor; mutual benefit less defined or visible |
| Collaboration culture | Expected high degree of both internal and external collaboration as research teams | Individual interpersonal interactions mostly internal to the program or institution |
Four Protype Career Pathways for Academic Clinician Educators
| Career pathways | Sample roles | Time allocation | Scholarship possibilities | Recommended support from chiefs, chairs, and mentors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| “BIG C” | ||||
| Master clinician | Generalist, hospitalist, or subspecialist focused on clinical mastery | Majority time in patient care, often includes clinical teaching or mentoring | Case reports, clinical reviews, book chapters, grand rounds | Allocated time for reading and scholarship; workshops on teaching and feedback; funds to participate in national professional societies, nomination for local or national master clinician awards. |
| Clinician leader | Medical director of ambulatory or inpatient service | Most time in clinical care and clinical program leadership, includes some clinical teaching or mentoring | Program development and evaluation, clinical guidelines, quality improvement, policy statements | Allocated time and guidance for scholarship; training in leadership, quality improvement, health care financing; funds to participate in national professional societies; nomination for local or national committee or leadership positions |
| “BIG E” clinician | ||||
| Education leader | Director of course, clerkship, residency, or fellowship program | Variable time allocation to patient care and education leadership responsibilities | Curricular innovation, program evaluation, education-related manuscripts (e.g., trainee wellness, diversity, or professionalism) | Allocated time and guidance for scholarship; training in curriculum development, learner assessment, program evaluation; encouragement and funds to present at education national meetings; nomination for local or national education positions |
| Education researcher | A clinician educator with additional training (e.g., master’s or doctoral degree) | Variable time allocation to patient care and education research, mentorship, or education journal editorships | Education research, education perspectives, education review articles | Allocated time for research; funds for training in education research methods; encouragement to collaborate and mentor within and across institutions; support for intramural education research grants and awards |
Figure 1Early and mid-career milestones for academic clinician educators in multiple domains.
| □ Include the clinical and education missions in all activities and acknowledgements (e.g. education-focused grand rounds, newsletter celebrating successes) *,† | |
| □ Invite all unit faculty (including clinician researchers) to participate in focused high-priority clinical and teaching activities and discussions *,†,‡ | |
| □ Require all senior faculty members to sponsor others by inviting junior clinician educators to co-author case reports, invited commentaries, or book chapters *,†,‡ | |
| □ Encourage participation on local committees and national professional societies *,†,‡ | |
| □ Introduce clinician educators to colleagues locally and nationally *,†,‡ | |
| □ Designate a 10-20% funded associate chair* or chief† to oversee clinician educators’ advancement, wellness, and support | |
| □ Fund 10-20% start-up academic time for 1-2 years to launch new clinician educators *,† | |
| □ Consider funding a 6-month scholarship sabbatical for mid-career clinician educators *,† | |
| □ Provide funds for faculty development (e.g., writing workshops), career expenses (e.g., meeting registration), and administrative tasks (e.g., scheduling assistance) *,†,‡ | |
| □ Nurture philanthropic support for clinical programs, education programs, and clinician educator faculty members (e.g., endowed chairs) *,† | |
| □ Match new clinician educators with clinician educator mentors and encourage additional internal and external organic mentor pairings *,† | |
| □ Structure mentoring around individual development plans *,†,‡ | |
| □ Encourage all clinician educators to identify a clinical and/or education niche *,†,‡ | |
| □ Enhance skills with workshops and works-in-progress sessions *,†,‡ | |
| □ Institute a pre-promotion CV review meeting (during years 3 or 4) to identify gaps *,†,‡ | |
| □ Review mentor assignment; change (as needed) and expand their mentor network *,† | |
| □ Nominate for awards, speaking opportunities, and/or leadership positions *,†,‡ | |
| □ Include clinician educators in grant applications (e.g., to co-lead patient education) *,†,‡ | |
| □ Encourage a writing habit and aim for at least 1-2 publications per year *,†,‡ | |
| □ Encourage additional training, and serving as a trainer, in mentorship and sponsorship*,† | |
| □ Match with junior clinician educators as career mentors*,† | |
| □ Facilitate discussions about legacy and succession of educational leadership positions*,† | |
| □ Identify funding mechanisms to support as mentor, sponsor, scholar, and/or leader*,† |
In the text box, the superscripts indicate:
*Actions recommended for department chairs
†Actions recommended for division chiefs
‡Actions recommended for mentors