Implementation of a protocol to increase the academic productivity of cardiothoracic surgery resident physicians

J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2022 Feb;163(2):739-745. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2020.09.122. Epub 2020 Oct 7.

Abstract

Objective: Academic productivity during cardiothoracic surgery residency training is an important program metric, but is highly variable due to multiple factors. This study evaluated the influence of implementing a protocol to increase resident physicians' academic productivity in cardiac surgery.

Methods: A comprehensive protocol for cardiac surgery was implemented at our institution that included active pairing of residents with academically productive faculty, regular research meetings, centralized data storage and analysis with a core team of biostatisticians, a formal peer-review protocol for analytic requests, and project prioritization and feedback. We compared cardiothoracic surgery residents' academic productivity before implementation (July 2015-June 2017) versus after implementation (July 2017-June 2019). Academic productivity was measured by peer-reviewed articles, abstract presentations (oral or poster) at national cardiothoracic surgery meetings, and textbook chapters.

Results: Thirty-four resident physicians (from traditional and integrated programs) trained at our institution during the study. A total of 122 peer-reviewed articles were produced over the course of the study: 74 (60.7%) cardiac- and 48 (39.3%) thoracic-focused. The number of cardiac-focused resident-produced articles increased from 10 preimplementation to 64 postimplementation (0.61 vs 2.03 articles per resident; P < .01). Abstract oral or poster presentations also increased, from 11 to 40 (0.61 vs 1.33 abstracts per resident; P = .01). Textbook chapters increased from 4 to 15 following the intervention (0.22 vs 0.5 chapters per resident; P = .01).

Conclusions: Implementation of a dedicated protocol to facilitate faculty mentoring of resident research and streamline the data access, analysis, and publication process substantially improved cardiothoracic surgery residents' academic productivity.

Keywords: cardiac surgery research; research education; research protocol; resident productivity; surgical education.

MeSH terms

  • Academic Medical Centers
  • Authorship
  • Biomedical Research / education*
  • Cardiac Surgical Procedures / education*
  • Congresses as Topic
  • Curriculum
  • Education, Medical, Graduate*
  • Efficiency
  • Humans
  • Internship and Residency*
  • Mentors
  • Peer Review, Research
  • Program Evaluation
  • Speech
  • Surgeons / education*
  • Thoracic Surgery / education*