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Predoctoral MD-PhD grants as indicators of future NIH funding success
Shohini Ghosh-Choudhary, Neil Carleton, S. Mehdi Nouraie, Corrine R. Kliment, Richard A. Steinman
Shohini Ghosh-Choudhary, Neil Carleton, S. Mehdi Nouraie, Corrine R. Kliment, Richard A. Steinman
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Perspective Physician-Scientist Development Aging

Predoctoral MD-PhD grants as indicators of future NIH funding success

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Abstract

MD-PhD trainees constitute an important source of physician-scientists. Persistence on this challenging path is facilitated by success in garnering independent (R grant) support from the NIH. Published research tracks academic appointments and global R01 success for MD-PhD trainees but has not included information on future funding success of individual MD-PhD predoctoral grant holders. Here, we used data from the NIH RePORTER database to identify and track the funding trajectory of physician-scientists who received predoctoral grant support through the F30 mechanism, which is specific for dual-degree candidates. Male and female F30 awardees did not differ in their success in garnering K (postdoctoral training) grants, but, among F30 grant awardees, men were 2.6 times more likely than women to receive R funding. These results underscore the need for analysis of factors that contribute to the disproportionate loss of NIH-supported female physician-scientists between the predoctoral F30 and the independent R grant–supported stages.

Authors

Shohini Ghosh-Choudhary, Neil Carleton, S. Mehdi Nouraie, Corrine R. Kliment, Richard A. Steinman

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Figure 3

Transition from F30-to-K award.

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Transition from F30-to-K award.
(A) Of n = 1015 F30 awardees between 199...
(A) Of n = 1015 F30 awardees between 1990 and 2012, n = 102 men and n = 57 women went on to receive a K award in the 11.9-year median follow-up period. Overall median time to the start of the K award from the start of the F30 award was 10.7 years (10.5 years for men, 10.9 years for women). Bars represent median with 95% CI. (B) In the time-to-event analysis, no difference existed between men and women in the probability to receive a K award (P = 0.30, log-rank testing).

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ISSN 2379-3708

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