Planning for the future workforce in hematology research.

Blood
W Keith HootsDonna M DiMichele

Abstract

The medical research and training enterprise in the United States is complex in both its scope and implementation. Accordingly, adaptations to the associated workforce needs present particular challenges. This is particularly true for maintaining or expanding national needs for physician-scientists where training resource requirements and competitive transitional milestones are substantial. For the individual, these phenomena can produce financial burden, prolong the career trajectory, and significantly influence career pathways. Hence, when national data suggest that future medical research needs in a scientific area may be met in a less than optimal manner, strategies to expand research and training capacity must follow. This article defines such an exigency for research and training in nonneoplastic hematology and presents potential strategies for addressing these critical workforce needs. The considerations presented herein reflect a summary of the discussions presented at 2 workshops cosponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the American Society of Hematology.

References

Dec 17, 2009·Translational Research : the Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine·Andrew I Schafer
Dec 1, 2012·Service Science·Richard C LarsonMauricio Gomez Diaz
Jul 9, 2014·Shock·Gabriela CamiciaGabriela de Larrañaga
Sep 10, 2014·International Journal of Audiology·William ParkerAndrew Parker
Feb 3, 2015·Systems Research and Behavioral Science·Richard C LarsonYi Xue

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Citations

Feb 8, 2016·American Journal of Hematology·Tammuella SingletonSriya Gunawardena
Mar 30, 2017·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Carol SweeneyUNKNOWN CTSA Mentored-to-Independent Investigator Transition Working Group
Aug 3, 2017·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Alison K HallP Kay Lund

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