BMC Medical Education (Aug 2023)

Research interests of family physicians applying for research training

  • Jennifer K. Carroll,
  • Christina M. Hester,
  • Cory B. Lutgen,
  • Elisabeth Callen,
  • Sharon Hunt,
  • Angela M. Lanigan,
  • Gillian Bartlett-Esquilant,
  • Gretchen Irwin,
  • Warren A. Jones,
  • Natalia Loskutova,
  • Natabhona M. Mabachi,
  • Kolawole S. Okuyemi,
  • Lars E. Peterson,
  • Richard Edward Smith,
  • Cheri Tabel,
  • Amanda Weidner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04562-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background There is an ongoing need for research to support the practice of high quality family medicine. The Family Medicine Discovers Rapid Cycle Scientific Discovery and Innovation (FMD RapSDI) program is designed to build capacity for family medicine scientific discovery and innovation in the United States. Our objective was to describe the applicants and research questions submitted to the RapSDI program in 2019 and 2020. Methods Descriptive analysis for applicant characteristics and rapid qualitative analysis using principles of grounded theory and content analysis to examine the research questions and associated themes. We examined differences by year of application submission and the applicant’s career stage. Results Sixty-five family physicians submitted 70 applications to the RapSDI program; 45 in 2019 and 25 in 2020. 41% of applicants were in practice for five years or less (n = 27), 18% (n = 12) were in in practice 6–10 years, and 40% (n = 26) were ≥ 11 years in practice. With significant diversity in questions, the most common themes were studies of new innovations (n = 20, 28%), interventions to reduce cost (n = 20, 28%), improving screening or diagnosis (n = 19, 27%), ways to address mental or behavioral health (n = 18, 26%), and improving care for vulnerable populations (n = 18, 26%). Conclusion Applicants proposed a range of research questions and described why family medicine is optimally suited to address the questions. Applicants had a desire to develop knowledge to help other family physicians, their patients, and their communities. Findings from this study can help inform other family medicine research capacity building initiatives.

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