학술논문

Predictive Factor of Preresidency Publication on Career Academic Achievement in Urologists.
Document Type
article
Source
Urology practice. 8(3)
Subject
financing
oraganized
intership and residency
publications
publishing
schools
medical
financing
oraganized
schools
medical
Clinical Sciences
Language
Abstract
IntroductionPublications at any point in training can impact future academic interest and achievement. Implications of publishing scholarly work prior to residency on accomplishments during and after residency are understudied.MethodsWe obtained publication output before, during and after residency for urologists graduating between 2002 and 2008 from the 36 training programs affiliated with a top 50 urology hospital nationwide. Additional collected information included fellowship training, current appointment, total and R01 National Institutes of Health grants, and h-index. We compared urologists' preresidency scholarship with residency and career achievements.ResultsWe retrieved data from 543 urologists, of whom 161 (29.7%) and 92 (16.9%) published 1 or more total and first author manuscripts before residency, respectively. A total of 269 (49.5%) urologists went on to pursue fellowship and 183 (33.7%) entered academic practice. Urologists with a first author publication before residency had increased odds of entering academics (OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.2-3.1), obtaining National Institutes of Health grants (OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.1-4.3) and acquiring National Institutes of Health R01 grants (OR 4.1, 95% CI 1.7-9.7). Those with more first author manuscripts prior to residency were also more likely to pursue fellowship (p=0.0002), have a higher h-index (p