Academically Inclined: Predictors of Early Career Trajectory and Avenues for Early Intervention Among Neurosurgery Trainees
Document Type
Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relationship of academic activities before and during neurosurgery residency with fellowship or career outcomes has not been studied completely. OBJECTIVE: To assess possible predictors of fellowship and career outcomes among neurosurgery residents. METHODS: US neurosurgery graduates (2018-2020) were assessed retrospectively for peer-reviewed citations of preresidency vs intraresidency publications, author order, and article type. Additional parameters included medical school, residency program, degree (MD vs DO; PhD), postgraduate fellowship, and academic employment. RESULTS: Of 547 neurosurgeons, 334 (61.1%) entered fellowships. Fellowship training was significantly associated with medical school rank and first-author publications. Individuals from medical schools ranked 1 to 50 were 1.6 times more likely to become postgraduate fellows than individuals from medical schools ranked 51 to 92 (odds ratio [OR], 1.63 [95% CI 1.04-2.56]; P = .03). Residents with ≥2 first-author publications were almost twice as likely to complete a fellowship as individuals with <2 first-author publications (OR, 1.91 [95% CI 1.21-3.03]; P = .006). Among 522 graduates with employment data available, academic employment obtained by 257 (49.2%) was significantly associated with fellowship training and all publication-specific variables. Fellowship-trained graduates were twice as likely to pursue academic careers (OR, 1.99 [95% CI 1.34-2.96]; P < .001) as were individuals with ≥3 first-author publications ( P < .001), ≥2 laboratory publications ( P = .04), or ≥9 clinical publications ( P < .001). CONCLUSION: Research productivity, medical school rank, and fellowships are independently associated with academic career outcomes of neurosurgeons. Academically inclined residents may benefit from early access to mentorship, sponsorship, and publishing opportunities.
Medical Subject Headings
Humans; Neurosurgery (education); Retrospective Studies; Career Choice; Neurosurgical Procedures; Internship and Residency; Fellowships and Scholarships
Publication Date
4-1-2023
Publication Title
Neurosurgery
E-ISSN
1524-4040
Volume
92
Issue
4
First Page
854
Last Page
861
PubMed ID
36729517
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1227/neu.0000000000002285
Recommended Citation
Hulou, M Maher; Park, Marian T.; Essibayi, Muhammed Amir; McLouth, Christopher J.; Benner, Dimitri; Samaan, Christopher Ala; Madriñán-Navia, Humberto Jose; Howshar, Jacob T.; Graffeo, Christopher S.; and Lawton, Michael T., "Academically Inclined: Predictors of Early Career Trajectory and Avenues for Early Intervention Among Neurosurgery Trainees" (2023). Neurosurgery. 1773.
https://scholar.barrowneuro.org/neurosurgery/1773