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http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/324/7335/437
BMJ 2002;324:437-438 ( 23 February )
Editorials
Academic medicine: a faltering engine
Action is needed to respond to growing
need and opportunities
News p 446
"Oh let me lead an
academicke life"
B Hall, Virgidem 1599;IV:83
Arecent report for the council of heads of medical schools for the United
Kingdom has concluded that 1000 more clinical academic posts
will be needed by 2006 to train 2500 more medical students
a 60% increase in the number of
students since 1998.1
Clinical research is also under threat: the number of clinical
academics active in research in British universities fell by 12%
between the 1996 and 2001 research assessment exercises
(from 2813 to 2469 full time equivalents).2 Despite
this, there is a crisis in recruitment and retention of clinical
academics within the United Kingdom such that over 10% of posts are
unfilled.1
This is not a new problem. In 1995 a House of Lords select
committee drew attention to recruitment problems in academic
medicine. In 1997 the Richards report made
35 recommendations to prevent a threat to academic medicine,
yet few of these were acted on.3 Why
has this crisis occurred and what can be done about it?
Unfortunately there is no single culprit. The uncertain career structure for
clinical academics remains a major disincentive. Although the specialist
registrar training programme provides a structured and accelerated
approach to training junior doctors, it lacks flexibility in
accommodating the training of academics, which involves a
postdoctoral research fellowship. Undertaking a period of protected
research remains a competitive process. The Medical Research Council
and Wellcome Trust, for example, fund only one in five of all
applications for clinical training fellowships. But competition may
be healthy for the development of academic medicine. Few students
entering medical school plan a career in academic medicine, but the
need to do research to be competitive at an interview stimulates
many into such a career. Increased competition for national
specialty training posts will, it is hoped, increase our recruitment
for research. The Medical Research Council and Wellcome Trust have
increased their clinical training fellowships by 100% over the past
five years and other charities have followed suit.
Thereafter academic trainees still switch to a career in the NHS, and two
factors contribute to this lack of retention.4 The
first is the perceived inability of the trainees to achieve competitiveness
in funding future research aspirations. This is intricately linked
to career structure. Pressures from research assessment exercises in
some universities have eroded clinical lecturer posts, an important
stepping stone in the development of an academic. A comparable
non-clinical post is usually more competitive in terms of research
output and value for money. Senior academics have had to respond to
increased demands from the NHS and teaching responsibilities,
leaving less time for research. Universities must take some blame
here.
Academic promotion is biased towards research output rather than teaching
largely because funding is also biased that
way. Most medical schools receive two thirds of their income on the
basis of the numbers of students taught, but until recently there was
no assessment of quality of teaching. The recent teaching quality
assessment exercise5
did grade the quality of teaching, but it has no implications for
funding. By contrast, the remaining third of the funding depends on
the amount and quality of research as determined by scores achieved
in the research assessment exercise.2 This
emphasis on research as opposed to teaching may undermine the
expansion of the medical profession, particularly if new posts funded
by taking in more medical students are prioritised to research driven
appointments.
Here the relationship with the local NHS is important. The NHS relies
heavily on clinical academics for providing patient care, but
medical schools increasingly depend on NHS colleagues and premises
to deliver the clinical curriculum. However, the funding underpinning
this relationship varies across the United Kingdom. In Cambridge
nearly 60% of clinical academic posts are funded by the NHS, but in
Southampton only 14% are. The mean across the United Kingdom is 37%.1
The second factor that deters progression in an academic career is lack of
parity of income with a clinical career, due both to earnings lost
during training and the inability to earn from private practice. The
latter probably accounts for the current discrepancy in academic
training in different specialties. In a recent survey 67% of
research training fellows planned a career in the subdisciplines of
internal medicine, but only 7% in surgery. Only one individual
aspired to be an academic anaesthetist, yet anaesthetists comprise
the largest group of consultants in the United Kingdom.4 Parity of
income may further worsen as the government, in the absence of
additional NHS resources, seems content to foster private practice.
Parity of income has been a major threat to academic medicine in the
United States also.
The career structure for clinical academics is being improved. A strong
message from the Academy of Medical Sciences and council of heads of
medical schools to all deans is to preserve the post of clinical
lecturer in spite of internal pressures. In addition to more
training fellowships, charity and council funded fellowships are
being recognised as an important step to enable an established academic
trainee to gain further experience. The development of 50 clinician-scientist
posts in the United Kingdom as a result of the recent Savill report
is an important advance.6
These posts are aimed at research-led clinical academics with outstanding
research potential demonstrated during their first period of
research. They can enter a five year post that enables them to
complete clinical training while simultaneously extending their
research training and base. Medical schools are encouraged to view
these posts as a tenure track leading to a strategic senior appointment
in the school after the fellowship. This is a major innovation but
one which must see an exponential expansion over the next five years
to make a significant impact on career development. An improved
environment for clinical academics will be facilitated through the
Wellcome Trust Clinical research facilities
five purpose built research
institutes across the United Kingdom dedicated to patient oriented
clinical research and based on the general clinical research centres
in the United States. Improvements in infrastructure are expected
through successful government and Wellcome Trust funding awards.
So there remain many obstacles before one can "lead an academicke
life." We need to reward excellence in teaching if the government wishes
to train more competent doctors. Equally important are issues
surrounding career structures and parity of pay. However, we should
also undertake a public relations exercise to improve recruitment
and retention, and here the Academy of Medical Sciences could play a
major part. The professional rewards for success in academic
medicine are immense. We rely heavily on clinical academics for
national and international leadership in medical affairs. In an era
of manager-driven health provision, academic clinicians have the
luxury of a varied workload
still a commitment to clinical
practice
but importantly the ability to control their
destiny through excellence in research and education. Despite a
current crisis the future remains bright for academic medicine.
Paul M Stewart, professor of medicine.
University of Birmingham, Queen Elizabeth
Hospital, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TH
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1.
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Smith TA, Shine P. A survey of clinical academic
staffing levels in UK medical and dental schools. Council of Heads of
Medical Schools, London 2001. www.chms.ac.uk/fchms_pubs.html
(accessed 18 February 2001).
|
|
2.
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Results of the 1996 and 2001 Research Assessment
Exercise 9. www.hefce.ac.uk/Research/
|
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3.
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Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals. Clinical Academic
Careers (The Richards Report). London: CVCP, 1997.
|
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4.
|
Goldacre M, Stear S, Richards R, Sidebottom E. Junior
doctors' views about careers in academic medicine. Med Educ 1999; 33:
318-326[Medline].
|
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5.
|
Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. Assessment
of Medical Schools. www.qaa.ac.uk/revreps/subjrev/Medicine/
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6.
|
Academy of Medical Sciences Working Party Report. The
tenure-track clinician scientist: a new career pathway to promote recruitment
into clinical academic medicine. London: AMS, 2000.
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© BMJ 2002
Rapid Response responses to
this article:
Read all Rapid Response
responses
Academic Medicine is still hospital based?
Campbell Murdoch
bmj.com, 21 Feb 2002 [Response]
Academic Medicine: Meeting the Challenge
Mary E Manning, et al.
bmj.com, 22 Feb 2002 [Response]
Latent interest in academic medicine
Prithwish Banerjee
bmj.com, 22 Feb 2002 [Response]
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