key: cord-0830676-y7iskhs0 authors: Anand, Pratibha; Szeto, Mindy D.; Flaten, Hania; D'Angelo, Josephine; Dunnick, Cory A.; Dellavalle, Robert P. title: Dermatology residency research policies: A 2021 national survey date: 2021-05-24 journal: Int J Womens Dermatol DOI: 10.1016/j.ijwd.2021.05.003 sha: c920216f0f731d576e67bf40b70ab414ad7b4682 doc_id: 830676 cord_uid: y7iskhs0 BACKGROUND: In this follow-up study to previous work, the authors survey the availability of key measures and resources pertaining to residency research in U.S. Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education–accredited dermatology residency programs, including potential policy changes following the COVID-19 pandemic. OBJECTIVE: The chief objective of this survey was to evaluate and compare dermatology programs’ resident research requirements and guidelines. METHODS: This cross-sectional study employed a 13-item survey administered online in early 2021 to assess the degree to which dermatology residency programs require and support their new physician graduates in scholarly research endeavors. RESULTS: A total of 32 program directors representing 30 dermatology residency programs (30 of 138 accredited programs contacted [22%]) responded to the survey. Almost all programs described quality improvement project requirements for residents and were able to provide funding for resident conference participation. Most programs also reported resident publication requirements and the availability of research electives. However, the vast majority did not have required research rotations or a formal mentorship program. The COVID-19 pandemic did not have a substantial impact on residency research requirements. CONCLUSION: Our survey provides objective data about the current dermatology resident research requirements across the United States. These findings may prove valuable to prospective applicants, residency programs, and accrediting agencies in improving, advancing, and structuring dermatology residency guidelines and resources with the aim of encouraging new physician trainees to pursue research. Dermatology remains one of the most competitive specialty residency programs in medicine, with a 2020 match rate of just 84.7% for U.S. graduating senior medical school students. Applicants who successfully matched into dermatology demonstrated a robust commitment to research, with an average of 19 total abstracts, presentations, and publications, 9.4 volunteer experiences, and 5.8 research experiences ( National Resident Matching Program, 2020 ) . The decidedly systematized applicant selection process notwithstanding, dermatology residency programs diverge considerably in their structure and commitment to resident research. Although the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) expects residents to participate in scholarly activity, the particulars regarding research are largely nonspecific, imprecise, and sparingly characterized in the literature, and most dermatology residency programs do not formally set aside time dedicated to research ( Wagner et al., 2013 ) . Our present survey is a follow-up study to our initial 2018 cross-sectional study of 12 key resident research-related criteria in https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijwd.2021.05.003 2352-6475/© 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Women's Dermatologic Society. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ ) Table 1 Online survey questionnaire covering criteria related to research support and resources in residency, distributed via e-mail to dermatology residency program directors in early 2021 30 ACGME dermatology residency programs in the United States ( Anand et al., 2021 ) . We built on our original findings by resurveying a larger number of ACGME programs (n = 138) in early 2021, a substantial increase from the 114 programs surveyed in 2018. We additionally focused on how the COVID-19 pandemic has influenced residency research among dermatology programs. We thus lay the foundation for more nuanced, context-specific, and robust research support, in hopes of increasing engagement, transparency, and possibly standardization of research requirements for dermatology residency programs across the United States. In accordance with previously published methods ( Anand et al., 2021 ) , we administered a cross-sectional survey with a categorical, study-specific, online questionnaire. A team of subject experts, including practicing dermatologists, dermatology residency program directors, and medical students, developed the survey. An institutional review board exemption for non-human subject research (COMIRB #17-1634) was obtained from the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board. The Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) platform hosted at the University of Colorado Denver was used to collect and manage the study data. REDCap is a secure, web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies, providing 1) an intuitive interface for validated data entry, 2) audit trails for tracking data manipulation and export procedures, 3) automated export procedures for seamless data downloads to common statistical packages, and 4) procedures for importing data from external sources ( Harris et al., 2009 ) . Our final survey ( Table 1 ) contained 13 items: 12 yes/no questions and one numerically coded question querying respondents about how many days annually residents in their program are allocated to attend academic events, such as the American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) Annual Meeting, research symposia, or other professional conferences. Free response options were available to elaborate on yes answers. All 142 ACGME-accredited dermatology residency programs were eligible for our study. Structured searches in the ACGME, American Medical Association, and AAD websites allowed retrieval of program contact information. Information was collected directly from individual program websites for programs where this information was unavailable or outdated according to the aforementioned sources. Four programs that declined to be recontacted after the 2018 survey were excluded. Each program then received emails between January 2021 and February 2021 outlining the objectives of our study and providing a secure website link to the REDCap survey. Programs that did not respond to our initial survey request were recontacted via e-mail. The survey data were then securely downloaded from the REDCap database and tabulated as responses were obtained. Characterizing the potential program differences in the specifications and requirements of their dermatology residency research policies was the primary aim of our study. Our surveyed criteria included publication requirements, quality improvement (QI) projects, availability of research rotations and research electives, funding for academic events, and accessibility of research mentors. We also assessed the existence of a formal written statement describing the program's policies regarding resident research and conference attendance. Subsequently, we intended to examine the nature of these program differences, if any, and to categorize and systematize our findings for possible future use and benefit by dermatology associations, accrediting organizations, dermatology residency programs, and prospective dermatology applicants. We collected a total of 32 responses to our questionnaire from dermatology program directors and coordinators representing 30 different residency programs (summary of responses anonymized by program region and size in Table 2 ). The majority of respondents (n = 16; 53%) reported having resident publication requirements. Almost all respondents (n = 27; 90%) described QI requirements for residents. Alternatively, only four respondents (13%) reported having a required research rotation for residents, but 18 (60%) reported offering a research elective option, a large increase from the 11 programs surveyed (37%) offering research electives in 2018. Two previously surveyed university programs that did not offer a research elective in 2018 had added this option by 2021. Of note, however, three other university programs responding in 2018 reported that they had removed their earlier publication requirements by 2021, and another academic program had withdrawn its stipulation for a resident QI project over that time period as well. Although 23 programs (77%) had a written statement outlining program policies on resident research and conference attendance, only three programs (10%) allotted ≥10 days off per year for residents to attend academic events, such as research symposia or professional conferences, a decrease from 23% (n = 7 of 30 of programs) with this allotment in 2018 (five previously surveyed programs decreased the number of allowed conference days off, and only one program increased its allotment). Despite this, the large majority of programs reported having funding allocated for residents to attend the AAD Annual Meeting (n = 26 of 30 [87%]), as well as funding to participate in other conferences or educational activities (n = 27 of 30 [90%]). Most programs surveyed were found to financially support conference and meeting attendance, but far fewer (n = 19; 63%) had additional funding for residents to present their research (poster or talk) at these events. Even fewer programs (n = 10; 33%) reported a formal mentorship program for residents and research mentors to connect. Nevertheless, all but one program (n = 29 of 30 [97%]) confirmed that their residents had access to research mentors. The ACGME continues to maintain that graduate medical education should take place in "an environment of inquiry and scholarship in which residents participate in the development of new knowledge, learn to evaluate research findings, and develop habits of inquiry as a continuing professional responsibility." The Residency Review Committees of the ACGME explicitly oblige residents to engage in scholarship in the course of their training, including case reports, reviews of research, and original research ( ACGME, 2017 ). Inadequate or unsatisfactory evidence of residents' scholarly pursuits is one of the most frequent reasons why residency programs are cited by the Residency Review Committees ( Beasley et al., 2002 ) , and inviting subsequent studies of policy fulfillment and outcome measures will be important in the future. Studies point to specific common elements shared by successful research training programs, including 1) protected research time, 2) research methods instruction, 3) effective mentorship, and 4) an environment that promotes and celebrates research participation ( Bland and Ruffin, 1992 ; Bland and Schmitz, 1986 ; Temte et al., 1994 ) . Although many of these elements were included by the programs we surveyed, our findings overall indicate that residency policies, procedures, structure, and support for dermatology research is considerably varied, despite the numerous advantages associated with resident research. The majority of residency programs did encourage research activity; concerningly, however, most of the program directors surveyed described several impediments to research, including the absence of existing research requirements, funding, curricula, guidelines, and mentors. Certain study limitations should be noted. First, our sample size was limited to those ACGME dermatology residency programs that responded to our survey, which was approximately one-fifth (n = 30 of 138 [22%]) of all programs. Our findings as reported in aggregate terms could be subject to response bias and therefore may not be representative of ACGME dermatology programs as a whole. Second, although participants were given the option to elaborate on their responses, not all opted to answer the openended free-response questions, and the degree of elucidation or elaboration provided varied considerably. Nonetheless, the survey responses we gathered included many top 20 medical schools ( U.S. News, 2021 ), residency programs from every geographical region of the United States and covered a wide range of settings, including urban, rural, large, small, academic, public, private, and government-run, institutions. Patterns of research requirements or funding availability were not found to differ substantially by setting, suggesting that broader systemic trends and lack of policy standardization may be contributing factors. Our survey provides a notable addition to the paucity of recent empirical literature describing and evaluating the specific elements of a comprehensive resident research program, especially in dermatology. Whereas other specialties have outlined the type of research rotations, support, curricula, or policies required during residency training ( Boninger et al., 2001 ; Kanna et al., 2006 ; Segal et al., 2006 ; Vinci et al., 2009 ) , dermatology residencies particularly call for further consideration because they attract exceptionally high-achieving applicants and are uniquely poised to spearhead resident research ( Wagner et al., 2013 ) . Dermatology residencies have also historically been organized to grant residents protected time to pursue academic pursuits outside of the required clinical responsibilities ( Gorouhi et al., 2014 ; Tuong et al., 2015 ; Wu et al., 2006 ) , in sharp contrast to many other specialties prior to the implementation of strict duty-hour regulations ( Oxnard et al., 2009 ) . Clearly, there are a myriad of benefits associated with research during residency. Enhanced patient care may result from fostering critical appraisal skills, clinical reasoning, and lifelong learning through research ( Abramson, 1977 ; Goodman, 1994 ) . Because publication during residency is associated with careers in academic medicine ( Hillman et al., 1989 ) , integrating postgraduate training research could also aid in bolstering the diminishing numbers of clinician investigators ( Rosenberg, 20 0 0 ). Presentation and publication of resident research may also increase the reputation of residency programs, improving their appeal to more competitive applicants ( Heinrich et al., 1999 ; Schultz, 1996 ) . Finally, research experience during residency is advantageous to residents applying for jobs or fellowships ( Souba et al., 1996 ) . Although there is a rising need for clinician-scientists, significant obstacles discourage new medical graduates from pursuing careers in clinical research. A dearth of formal programs is currently set up to target resident physicians interested in research, and even though ample effort s have been made to develop research exposure and training for medical students and fellows, prior studies have indicated that residents develop an increasing disinterest for research, coupled with less time set aside for research ( Thompson and Moskowitz, 1997 ) . It is likely that residency was deemed too hectic to accommodate research, due to its busy schedule emphasizing clinical training and subspecialty selection. Residents are expected to achieve mastery in an ever-mounting span of health care knowledge in medical innovations, data, and technology as patient care has concomitantly become more challenging due to shorter hospital stays, greater acuity, and higher turnover. Demands to decrease patient length of stay and improve other metrics, such as discharge disposition, may lead to the unintended consequence of dissuading residents from engaging in research by compromising scientific inquiry ( Oxnard et al., 2009 ) . Various solutions have been proposed and implemented in response to limited or otherwise compromised research requirements, opportunities, and access during dermatology residencies. For example, in 2005, the dermatology residency program at the University of Texas Medical Branch introduced several changes in its dermatology residency program with the objective of integrating formal research projects into the training period. Initially, the program supported voluntary research, and by 2009, the curriculum required scholarly projects of all its dermatology residents. The dermatology department supported this requirement by assigning residents a faculty mentor with similar research interests and providing monetary support for materials and statistical consultations. The department also implemented a 2-week research elective that gives residents protected time from clinical activities with the goal of publishing their work in a peer-reviewed journal. Each year, an award is given in recognition of the best resident scholarly project ( Wagner et al., 2013 ) . The University of Miami likewise has a mandated research requirement for its dermatology residents, with the goal of publishing peer-reviewed research. Unlike the program at the University of Texas Medical Branch, residents at the University of Miami are not granted protected time to work on their research projects. However, the program is highly structured. By November of their first year of training, residents must present a research grant proposal to the departmental research committee and identify a faculty advisor. As their training progresses, residents report ongoing work and cumulative results at weekly scientific research meetings. Research findings are presented in various settings, including regional and national meetings. The departmental research committee evaluates the financial feasibility of projects, and costs associated with the scholarly projects are covered by the faculty advisor or departmental fund dedicated to resident research ( Kirsner et al., 1999a ) . Lack of adequate research funding is not necessarily a barrier to scholarly project completion. One survey examining required research in internal medicine programs found that most residents (54%) did not have funding for their projects ( Rivera et al., 2005 ) . Programs can help maintain financial viability by helping residents focus and hone their research questions and by making use of previously established resources, such as databases and data gathered from prior research, because many scholarly projects can be retrospective or cross-sectional analyses. Modest prospective studies are also potential research learning experiences ( Hamann et al., 2006 ) . Because resident research is usually not subsidized by grants or other funding sources, procuring statistical support can be a frequent challenge. Preferably, research program directors can aid with basic statistical issues, but a dedicated research account should be established that includes funds for travel, poster creation, and statistical expertise. Residency programs can also limit monetary expenses by capping the amount of funds set aside for research, by subsidizing no more than one presentation per resident, or by granting set amounts of discretionary funding. Faculty advisors and research mentors may also elect to subsidize travel expenses. Lastly, a program may choose to host a local or regional research meeting to showcase residents' scholarly projects ( Hamann et al., 2006 ) . In addition, grants offered by dermatologic societies for research and presentation support throughout the year are manifold. The AAD maintains a list of several dozen grants for dermatology research ( AAD, 2021a ), including a list of research grants from outside organizations ( AAD, 2021b ) . Other examples include the American Skin Association's funding of a $10 0,0 0 0 Investigative Scientist Award for Melanoma Research, as well as several $60,0 0 0 awards for research in a variety of other focus-specific areas ( American Skin Association, 2021 ); the Skin Cancer Foundation awards two $50,0 0 0 grants and one $25,0 0 0 grant for clinical study and research related to furthering skin cancer prevention, detection, and treatment methods ( Skin Cancer Foundation, 2021 ); the National Psoriasis Foundation also issues Early Career research grants of up to $50,0 0 0 ( National Psoriasis Foundation, 2021 ). Nonetheless, overall resident exposure to researchers who can serve as mentors has declined due to increased reliance on hospitalists as attending physicians on inpatient wards at teaching hospitals ( Kralovec et al., 2006 ) . Given that dermatology remains primarily an outpatient specialty, many residency programs rely heavily on outpatient rotations, limiting opportunities for residents on inpatient consult services. Dermatology residents may therefore have less access to mentorship and training with hospitalist physicians, a large potential source of research mentorship for residents. However, changes in medical care have contributed to increased value being placed on dermatologists as consultants for hospital-ized patients, while fewer patients are being admitted to dermatology services ( Kirsner et al., 1999b ; Mancusi and Neto, 2010 ) . Maximizing opportunities for teaching and mentorship in both the outpatient and inpatient setting is thus also an important consideration for resident education, especially given the recent shift to telemedicine during the COVID-19 pandemic ( Hammond et al., 2020 ) . Understandably, the deprivation of mentorship exposure during residency is likely to result in a dearth of researchers in the future, because residency is the time in which most graduates are deciding on their career trajectories ( Freeman et al., 2008 ) . Physicians committed to research careers must now consider the rising financial challenges of research, the volatility of federal research budgets, and a lack of mentorship opportunities ( Nathan, 1998 ; Rosenberg, 1999 ; Wolf, 2002 ) . Thus, morale among aspiring investigators is waning, with many opting to relinquish their research interests to pursue full-time clinical careers ( Shulman, 1996 ; Thompson and Moskowitz, 1997 ) . The eventual effect of these trends has not yet been fully realized and is especially concerning given movement toward faster-paced health care delivery, precision medicine, and technological innovation ( Oxnard et al., 2009 ) . Ultimately, requiring and supporting resident research has the ability to improve the quality and future of medicine and dermatology. Nevertheless, for fruitful research to take place on a large scale, residency training programs must overcome several significant hurdles. Successful implementation demands a thoughtful methodology that focuses on surmounting specific obstacles, beginning with organizational changes to encourage an environment of scientific inquiry, an assurance of external institutional support (e.g., from the American Medical Association, AAD, and ACGME), and the economic investment to create the infrastructure required to support research endeavors. The noteworthy significance and benefits of resident research notwithstanding, our study indicates that a large number of dermatology residency programs lack some or all of the requisite support, structure, and resources needed to satisfactorily and effectually promote and maintain research training effort s. Our findings evaluate various factors pertaining to resident research training and add to an emergent body of research with the ability to guide future scholarship and interventions aimed at addressing residency research deficits. Dr. Robert P. Dellavalle is a joint coordinating editor for Cochrane Skin, a dermatology section editor for UpToDate, a social media editor for the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology , editor-in-chief of the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) Dermatology , and a podcast editor for the Journal of Investigative Dermatology . He is also a coordinating editor representative on Cochrane Council. Dr. Cory A. Dunnick is a clinical trials investigator for Pfizer, Abbvie, Amgen, Kyowa, and Target Derm. None. Exemption was obtained from the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board (COMIRB #17-1634). Improving resident education: What does resident research really have to offer? Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education American Academy of Dermatology. Awards, grants, and scholarships Research grants from outside organizations For grant seekers Dermatology residency research policies and support: A national USA survey Determining the predictors of internal medicine residency accreditation: What they do (not what they say) Characteristics of a productive research environment: Literature review Characteristics of the successful researcher and implications for faculty development Resident research education in physical medicine and rehabilitation: A practical approach S. dermatology residents' satisfaction with training and mentoring: Survey results from the 2005 and 2006 Las Vegas Dermatology Seminars Does research make better doctors? Dermatology residency selection criteria with an emphasis on program characteristics: A national program director survey Clinical research during internal medicine residency: A practical guide Conducting inpatient dermatology consultations and maintaining resident education in the COVID-19 telemedicine era Research electronic data capture (REDCap)-A metadata-driven methodology and workflow process for providing translational research informatics support Developing a research program in a community teaching hospital Factors influencing radiologists to choose research careers The research rotation: Competency-based structured and novel approach to research training of internal medicine residents The role of mandated research during dermatology residency training The changing status of inpatient dermatology at American academic dermatology programs The status of hospital medicine groups in the United States Inpatient dermatological consultations in a university hospital Clinical research: perceptions, reality, and proposed solutions. National Institutes of Health Director's Panel on Clinical Research National Psoriasis Foundation. Early career research grants early-career-research-grants/ National Resident Matching Program. Results and data: 2020 main residency match Integrating research training into residency: Tools of human investigation Completing a scholarly project during residency training. Perspectives of residents who have been successful The physician-scientist: An essential-and fragile-link in the medical research chain Young physician-scientists: Internal medicine's challenge Research during internal medicine residency training: Meeting the challenge of the Residency Review Committee An elective research year in orthopaedic residency: How does one measure its outcome and define its success? Clinical research 1996: Stirrings from the academic health centers Skin Cancer Foundation Attitudes and opinions toward surgical research. A survey of surgical residents and their chairpersons Factors associated with research interest and activity during family practice residency Preventing the extinction of the clinical research ecosystem Factors influencing applicants' ranking of dermatology residency programs in the National Resident Matching Program 2021 best medical schools Research during pediatric residency training: Outcome of a senior resident block rotation Incorporating resident research into the dermatology residency program Clinical research career development: The individual perspective Dermatology residency program characteristics that correlate with graduates selecting an academic dermatology career