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The National MD-PhD Program Outcomes Study: career paths followed by Black and Hispanic graduates
Myles H. Akabas, Lawrence F. Brass
Myles H. Akabas, Lawrence F. Brass
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Physician-Scientist Development

The National MD-PhD Program Outcomes Study: career paths followed by Black and Hispanic graduates

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Abstract

Previous studies on attrition from MD-PhD programs have shown that students who self-identify as Black are more likely to withdraw before graduating than Hispanic students and students not from groups underrepresented in medicine (non-UIM). Here, we analyzed data collected for the National MD-PhD Program Outcomes Study, a national effort to track the careers of over 10,000 individuals who have graduated from MD-PhD programs over the past 60 years. On average, Black trainees took slightly longer to graduate, were less likely to choose careers in academia, and were more likely to enter nonacademic clinical practice; although, none of these differences were large. Black graduates were also more likely to choose careers in surgery or internal medicine, or entirely forego residency, and less likely to choose pediatrics, pathology, or neurology. Among those in academia, average research effort rates self-reported by Black, Hispanic, and non-UIM alumni were indistinguishable, as were rates of obtaining research grants and mentored training awards. However, the proportion of Black and Hispanic alumni who reported having NIH research grants was lower than that of non-UIM alumni, and the NIH career development to research project grant (K-to-R) conversion rate was lower for Black alumni. We propose that the reasons for these differences reflect experiences before, during, and after training and, therefore, conclude with action items that address each of these stages.

Authors

Myles H. Akabas, Lawrence F. Brass

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Figure 6

Colleges with high numbers of Pell grant recipients rarely send graduates to MD-PhD programs.

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Colleges with high numbers of Pell grant recipients rarely send graduate...
The thirty colleges with the highest percentage of students with Pell grants identified from data published by the New York Times (18). The number of MD-PhD students from those colleges and the number of MD-PhD students from the top 30 source colleges was obtained from survey data collected in 2021 (15). Survey respondents were asked to indicate the college from which they obtained their undergraduate degree. 2,511 of 3,544 (71%) provided the information.

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