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Developing a Clinical Research Career: How to get Started

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Building a research program is a series of small steps. Define the importance of the topic ... Make a list of research ideas to review with your mentor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Developing a Clinical Research Career: How to get Started


1
Developing a Clinical Research Career How to
get Started
  • Michael G. Shlipak, MD, MPH
  • Associate Professor In-Residence
  • Departments of Medicine, Epidemiology and
    Biostatistics
  • University of California, San Francisco
  • Division Chief, General Internal Medicine
  • San Francisco VA Medical Center

2
What is a Clinical Researcher?
  • Chooses the topics for his/her patient-oriented
    research
  • Develops original research ideas and answers them
  • Financially supports the time they and staff
    spend on research (grants usually)
  • A bit more than just enrolling patients into
    someone elses clinical trial
  • More than just a hobby or side activity

3
You can be a clinical researcher
  • You dont have to give up a normal life
  • You dont have to be a workaholic
  • You dont have to be brilliant/a genius/manic
  • You have to enjoy doing research
  • To succeed it has to be the main focus of your
    career
  • Fellowship is probably the best time to decide if
    research is the right career for you

4
Topic Outline
  • Should you do clinical research?
  • Where do good ideas come from?
  • Searching for mentors
  • Priorities for fellows/junior faculty
  • Other lessons learned

5
Topic I Should You do clinical research?
6
Why choose a career in clinical research?
  • Its a great job if
  • It fits into your skills
  • Its how you want to spend your time
  • Flexible lifestyle
  • Opportunity to contribute to the way medicine is
    practiced
  • Constantly challenging
  • Variety in day to day activities

7
How do you know if research is right for you?
  • Is research your favorite work activity?
  • Do you have skills that apply to clinical
    research?
  • Curiosity/Creative ideas
  • Analytic skills/Writing skills/Diligence
  • Communication skills/Clarity of thought
  • Is the process of discovery exciting to you?
  • Decide what activity will inspire you the most
    long-term patient care, teaching, research or
    administration
  • ? Are all parts of academic medicine

8
What is the downside of clinical research?
  • Research is a highly competitive field lots of
    faculty members want to be researchers
  • Researchers tend to be judged on productivity
  • Grants
  • Publications
  • Researchers have to be thick-skinned
  • Less job security
  • There are other jobs in academic medicine so
    being academic is not enough reason to be a
    researcher

9
Topic II Where do good ideas come from?
10
Where do ideas come from?
  • Greatest mystery/scariest part of research
  • Clinical practice how often in your clinical
    work do you make decisions based on conclusive
    evidence vs. dogma?
  • Limitations of current research (at the end of
    every papers discussion section)
  • Taking a public health perspective
    (under-treated/over-treated, costs of therapy,
    potential lives saved)

11
How to generate an idea
  • Ask around to senior clinicians about their
    conundrums
  • Read guidelines opinion vs. evidence
  • Read lots of journal articles - not necessarily
    whole articles, but at least the abstract
  • Review articles
  • For articles on your topic of interest
    scrutinize them intensely
  • Journal club

12
Think Broadly about a Topic
  • Your first paper will probably not be a large
    RCT.
  • The perfect study may be many years away.
  • Building a research program is a series of small
    steps.
  • Define the importance of the topic
  • Describe limitations of current therapies
  • Start with observational studies (e.g. examining
    hospital records)

13
Creativity
  • Requires an empty, alert brain
  • Ideas not limited to 40 hour work week
  • Brainstorm outside of the office
  • You need to be bored sometimes
  • Dont clutter your schedule

14
What do you do when you get an idea?
  • Do brief literature searches to see what has been
    done and take a few notes
  • Make a list of research ideas to review with your
    mentor
  • Best ideas favorable balance of risks and
    rewards

15
Primary vs. Secondary Data
  • Primary data you collect it yourself (direct
    patient contact, phone interviews, chart review,
    e.g.)
  • Secondary data someone else collected it
    (existing research studies, local hospital data,
    national administrative records)
  • Early career I strongly advise the use of
    secondary data
  • Primary data collection is too time consuming
    wait until your career is on solid ground

16
Find data appropriate for your research question
  • Identify a data source in the literature, local
    or distant
  • Any study you read about can be within reach
  • Before contacting the PI of a distant study get
    help communication style is critical
  • Use a local mentor to facilitate
  • The fear of the stolen idea is probably
    over-blown

17
Data driven hypotheses
  • An alternative strategy
  • Find out what data are available to you locally
    or through public access
  • Derive a research question that can be addressed
    with available variables
  • Data from many NIH studies (Framingham, e.g.) or
    from NHANES can be obtained for free

18
Good or Bad Idea? Project Litmus TestCan you
envision your project as a story?
  • Where does it fit in the saga of the literature?
  • Evaluate risk vs. reward how exciting will the
    paper be if hypothesis is a positive result? Is a
    null result publishable?
  • How broad of an audience will care about your
    project? (General public? All physicians? Your
    specialty only? Small group of researchers?)
  • The broader the audience and the more
    newsworthy the better the potential journal
    youll publish in.

19
Topic III Searching for mentors
  • http//acpers.ucsf.edu/mentoring/mentoring_program
    _guideli.php

20
What to look for in a potential research mentor
  • Must be an active researcher ?productive in
    papers
  • Track record of successful mentees getting jobs
    in clinical research
  • Interested in your career development
  • Helps if they are somewhat interested in your
    topic
  • Eventually, you need a mentor who understands
    grant writing.

21
Roles Of The Mentor
  • Many potential roles
  • Project specific - methodology, editing, research
    questions
  • Career counseling grants, job advice
  • Advocate promotion support, opportunities
  • Often is too much to ask from one individual
  • Personal qualities more important than fame and
    stature
  • May not be ideal to have your supervisor as
    mentor

22
Broaden your search for a mentor
  • Mentors do not have to be in your specialty -
    research methods overlap a lot across disciplines
  • Currently, UCSF is training faculty to be better
    mentors
  • Each department and division at UCSF has someone
    assigned to be a mentorship facilitator
  • Do not stick with a bad mentor relationship
  • If its not working- move on

23
Multiple Mentors
  • Allows you to draw from unique qualities of
    several faculty
  • Example career guidance and project guidance can
    come from two different people
  • Example Separate content expertise from
    methodology
  • Several persons to write letters, expand your
    opportunities
  • Having multiple mentors protects your from the
    unexpected
  • Sabbatical at inopportune times
  • Academic mobility

24
Good mentors give bad news
  • Caution dont pick a mentor just because they
    seem really nice
  • We all like people to tell us that our ideas are
    excellent/brilliant/creative/feasible
  • As a mentor for residents/fellows, the best
    advice I ever give is that a particular project
    is a waste of time
  • You need a mentor who can tell you, No, thats
    not worth the effort (bad idea)

25
You need to manage your mentors
  • Be proactive and schedule several short meetings
  • Be respectful
  • 1 week for paper/abstract
  • 3 weeks for letters of recommendation
  • 1 month for grant proposal
  • Be organized have an agenda/use their time
    effectively
  • Be responsive when they need you
  • Be appreciative when they help you

26
Topic IV Priorities for Fellows/Junior Faculty
27
Time Management
  • Top priority must be able to write papers
    original research papers and get grant funding!
  • Coursework is important, but. . .
  • Teaching is important, but. . .
  • Seeing patients (moonlighting) is important, but

28
Why its important to publish as a fellow
  • Primary goal of research fellowship is ORIGINAL
    RESEARCH
  • If you can publish original research papers, then
    future employers will think you have a promising
    future
  • No matter how great your research is, if you
    dont publish it, then it never happened
  • Your success as a research fellow (or early
    faculty member) will be judged by your
    productivity in papers

29
Writing Papers
  • You should feel a sense of urgency
  • Partly for the excitement of publishing
  • Partly because it takes a long time
  • Average length of time. . .
  • Preliminary decision
  • Average rejections/paper
  • For revision
  • Until decision
  • From acceptance until publication
  • Submission to print

3 months
3
1 month
1 month
6 months
1-2 years
30
Topic V Other lessons learned
31
Rejection
  • This is the worst part of research.
  • Often our papers/grants/job applications are not
    accepted.
  • For grants in particular, rejection is very
    painful, and drives many people out of research.
  • Recently, the threat of potential rejection has
    caused several productive UCSF investigators to
    abandon research.

32
How do researchers deal with rejection?
  • Send the same grant concept to several potential
    funders
  • Expect to revise/resubmit.
  • Always be ready for a new funding opportunity-
    NIH, other government sources, foundations,
    industry
  • When you get a rejection letter, dont read it
    for a day or two and take out your aggression
    productively.

33
The importance of being focused
  • Focus refers to having a specific research area,
    meaning that
  • All (or most) of your projects have a common
    theme
  • As this theme develops it becomes a body of
    work
  • Examples
  • Specific disease (or complication) CV effects
    of kidney disease
  • Methodology
  • e.g. cost-effectiveness, survey design, genetics,
    clinical trials
  • Population
  • e.g. homeless, nursing home inhabitants

34
Benefits to being focused
  • Simplified literature review for each paper
  • Understand all the gaps in the literature
  • Recognition as an expert, first locally then
    nationally.
  • Experts get grant funding invitations to lecture
    all over the world, write guidelines, etc
  • National recognition is essential for promotion

35
Learn how to say yes and no
  • Say No Anything that does not lead to
    original research papers or research funding
  • Extra clinical work/teaching
  • Review articles
  • Book chapters
  • Say Yes
  • Several projects (up to 5)
  • Collaborate with colleagues leads to great
    opportunities and is a fun part of research
  • Peer-review submitted manuscripts with a mentor
  • Attend journal clubs

36
Juggle Several Projects
  • Each project has its own risks/rewards
  • All projects have predictable delays
  • Keep looking for new ideas/opportunities
  • Multiple projects insures that all your research
    days can be productive
  • Another reason for collaboration it multiplies
    productivity

37
Thank You
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