Kerwyn Flowers, Shermeeka Hogans-Mathews, Adwoa Adu, Temiwumi Ojo, Judy C Washington, Stacy Ogbeide, Valerie J Flattes, Julie E Lucero, Amy Fulton, Kendall M Campbell, José E Rodríguez
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Based on responses to open-ended questions from a leadership survey, we characterize how early-career URiM family medicine faculty view leadership and assess attitudes and perceptions of leadership development.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>A survey, developed by survey experts from multiple institutions and consisting of multiple-choice and open-ended questions, was sent to the first two cohorts after the LTSF program. All LTSF participants identified as URiM and as early-career (5 years or less since fellowship or residency) family medicine faculty. Fellowship faculty collected anonymous survey responses through Qualtrics (Qualtrics, LLC). We conducted thematic analysis with emergent and iterative coding by two experienced qualitative researchers.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>All of the fellows surveyed (N=19) completed the survey. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景和目标:尽管在过去几十年中,被认定为医学界代表性不足(URiM)的教师人数不断增加,但URiM在学术医学领导层中的代表性却变化不大。全科医学教师协会(Society of Teachers of Family Medicine)资助了 "通过奖学金提高领导力奖学金"(LTSF),旨在为这一群体提供一个学术成功的框架。根据对领导力调查中开放式问题的回答,我们描述了早期职业URiM全科教师如何看待领导力,并评估了他们对领导力发展的态度和看法:由来自多个机构的调查专家开发的调查问卷由多项选择题和开放式问题组成,并在LTSF项目结束后发送给前两批学员。所有参加 LTSF 的人员都表明自己是 URiM 和职业生涯早期(获得研究员或住院医师资格后 5 年或更短)的家庭医学教师。研究员教员通过 Qualtrics (Qualtrics, LLC) 收集匿名调查回复。我们由两名经验丰富的定性研究人员进行了主题分析,并进行了新兴和迭代编码:所有接受调查的研究员(N=19)都完成了调查。定性研究人员确定了以下主题:领导力发展(副主题为合作性学术研究和要求指导),以及领导力和学术研究的障碍(副主题为缺乏时间、缺乏支持和晋升机会减少):这些主题代表了参加一次教师发展奖学金的 URiM 教师的经验教训。合作学术既是教师职业生涯初期的需要,也是领导者的责任,这是对现有文献的新贡献。虽然这些主题是由 URiM 家庭医学教员确定的,但对于所有医学专业和教员身份的早期职业教员来说,这些主题可能并不陌生。这些经验可以指导资深学术领导者为早期职业教员在学术医学中担任领导职务做好准备。
Perceptions of the Leadership Through Scholarship Fellowship Graduates: An Exploratory Qualitative Study of Leadership.
Background and objectives: Despite increasing numbers of faculty identifying as underrepresented in medicine (URiM) over the last few decades, URiM representation in academic medicine leadership has changed little. The Society of Teachers of Family Medicine funded the Leadership Through Scholarship Fellowship (LTSF) to target this population and provide a framework for scholarly success. Based on responses to open-ended questions from a leadership survey, we characterize how early-career URiM family medicine faculty view leadership and assess attitudes and perceptions of leadership development.
Methods: A survey, developed by survey experts from multiple institutions and consisting of multiple-choice and open-ended questions, was sent to the first two cohorts after the LTSF program. All LTSF participants identified as URiM and as early-career (5 years or less since fellowship or residency) family medicine faculty. Fellowship faculty collected anonymous survey responses through Qualtrics (Qualtrics, LLC). We conducted thematic analysis with emergent and iterative coding by two experienced qualitative researchers.
Results: All of the fellows surveyed (N=19) completed the survey. The qualitative researchers identified the following themes: leadership development (with subthemes of collaborative scholarship and request for mentoring), and barriers to leadership and scholarship (with subthemes of lack of time, lack of support, and diminished opportunities for advancement).
Conclusions: These themes represent lessons learned from URiM faculty participating in a single faculty development fellowship. Collaborative scholarship, both as an early-career faculty need and a leadership responsibility, is a new contribution to the existing literature. While identified by URiM family medicine faculty, these themes are likely familiar to early-career faculty across all medical specialties and faculty identities. These lessons can guide senior academic leaders in preparing early-career faculty for leadership in academic medicine.
期刊介绍:
Family Medicine, the official journal of the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, publishes original research, systematic reviews, narrative essays, and policy analyses relevant to the discipline of family medicine, particularly focusing on primary care medical education, health workforce policy, and health services research. Journal content is not limited to educational research from family medicine educators; and we welcome innovative, high-quality contributions from authors in a variety of specialties and academic fields.