| Literature DB >> 34197300 |
Andrew Sumarsono1, Neil Keshvani1,2, Sameh N Saleh1,3,4, Nathan Sumarsono5, Mindy Tran6, Maryam Warsi3, Christiana Renner1,3, Eugene S Chu1,3.
Abstract
Despite the rapid growth of academic hospital medicine, scholarly productivity remains poorly characterized. In this cross-sectional study, distribution of academic rank and scholarly output of academic hospital medicine faculty are described. We extracted data for 1,554 hospitalists on faculty at the top 25 internal medicine residency programs. Only 11.7% of faculty had reached associate (9.0%) or full professor (2.7%). The median number of publications was 0.0 (interquartile range [IQR], 0.0-4.0), with 51.4% without a single publication. Faculty 6 to 10 years post residency had a median of 1.0 (IQR, 0.0-4.0) publication, with 46.8% of these faculty without a publication. Among men, 54.3% had published at least one manuscript, compared to 42.7% of women (P < .0001). Predictors of promotion included H-index, number of years post residency graduation, completion of chief residency, and graduation from a top 25 medical school. Promotion remains uncommon in academic hospital medicine, which may be partially due to low rates of scholarly productivity.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34197300 DOI: 10.12788/jhm.3631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hosp Med ISSN: 1553-5592 Impact factor: 2.960