Abstract

Advancing understanding of human health promotion and disease prevention and treatment often requires teamwork. To evaluate academic medical institutions' support for team science in the context of researchers' career development, we measured the value placed on team science and specificity of guidance provided for documenting team science contributions in the promotion and tenure (P&T) documents of Colleges/Schools of Medicine (CoMs) in the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences' Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) program. We reviewed complete P&T documents from 57 of 63 CTSA CoMs to identify career paths defined by three dimensions: academic rank (associate versus full professor), tenure eligibility (tenure track versus not), and role (research, clinical, education, and administrative), and we rated team science value and documentation guidance for each path. Multilevel models were estimated to compare team science value and documentation guidance as a function of the three career path dimensions while accounting for the clustered data (N = 357 career paths within 57 CoMs). Team science value was greater for associate than full professors, non-tenure-eligible versus tenure-eligible positions, and roles prioritizing clinical, education, and administrative responsibilities versus those prioritizing research. Guidance for documenting team science achievements was more explicit for roles that prioritized research. Although P&T policies at most CTSA institutions express value for team science, inconsistent within-institutional patterns of recognition and reward across career paths may have implications for researchers' involvement in team science. We discuss the implications of our findings for research and for P&T policies that promote team science.

Highlights

  • Advancing understanding of human health promotion and disease prevention and treatment often requires teamwork

  • We focused on career paths within the CoMs at Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) institutions given the CTSA mission to promote team science [3], though these issues are relevant to CoMs more generally as well as to disciplines beyond the biomedical and health sciences; (2) Evaluate both the value placed on team science and the specificity of guidelines for documenting team science contributions for each career path; (3) Using a quantitative approach, test whether the ratings of team science value and the specificity of Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core

  • Model testing revealed that the best fitting model included random effects of track and role for both the analyses of team science value and documentation guidance, and these effects were included in the final models

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Summary

Introduction

Advancing understanding of human health promotion and disease prevention and treatment often requires teamwork. Method: We reviewed complete P&T documents from 57 of 63 CTSA CoMs to identify career paths defined by three dimensions: academic rank (associate versus full professor), tenure eligibility (tenure track versus not), and role (research, clinical, education, and administrative), and we rated team science value and documentation guidance for each path. Promotion and tenure (P&T) policies are at the foundation of the reward system in the academy [9,10,11, 13], they are reported to be one of the most serious impediments to team science [10, 13, 14] In response to this concern, a growing number of reports outline recommendations on best practices for institutional support of team science in the P&T process [8,9,10,11, 13, 14]

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