906 resultados para Brazilian medical education
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Previous studies have shown medical students in Germany to have little interest in research while at the same time there is a lack of physician scientists. This study’s aim is to investigate factors influencing publication productivity of physicians during and after finishing their medical doctorate. We conducted a PubMed search for physicians having received their doctoral degree at Ludwig-Maxmilians-University Munich Faculty of Medicine between 2011 and 2013 (N = 924) and identified the appropriate impact factor (IF) for each journal the participants had published in. Gender, age, final grade of the doctorate, participation in a structured doctoral study program and joint publication activities between graduate and academic supervisor were defined as factors. For analyses we used nonparametric procedures. Men show significantly more publications than women. Before their doctoral graduation men publish 1.98 (SD ± 3.64) articles on average, women 1.15 (±2.67) (p < 0.0001, d = 0.27). After completion of the doctorate (up to 06/2015), 40 % of men still publish, while only 24.3 % of women (p < 0.0001, φ = 0.17) continue to publish. No differences were found concerning the value of IFs. Similar results were found regarding the variable ‘participation in a structured doctoral study program’. Until doctoral graduation, program participants publish 2.82 (±5.41) articles, whereas participants doing their doctorate individually only publish 1.39 (±2.87) articles (p < 0.0001, d = 0.46). These differences persist in publication activities after graduation (45.5 vs. 29.7 %, p = 0.008, φ = 0.09). A structured doctorate seems to have positive influence on IFs (4.33 ± 2.91 vs. 3.37 ± 2.82, p = 0.006, d = 0.34). Further significant results concern the variables ‘final grade’ and ‘age’: An early doctoral graduation and an excellent or very good grade for the doctoral thesis positively influence publication productivity. Finally, joint publication activities between the graduate and his/her academic supervisor result in significantly higher IFs (3.64 ± 3.03 vs. 2.84 ± 2.25, p = 0.007, d = 0.28). The study’s results support the assumption about women’s underrepresentation in science as well as the relevance of structured doctoral study programs for preparing and recruiting young academics in medicine for scientific careers. Promoting women and further development of structured doctoral study programs are highly recommended.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Issues are part of New York University bulletin, and have enumeration relating to that publication.
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"Progress report AEC Contract no. AT(29-1)-1242."
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"TID-5764."
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Description based on : Sixth Annual Report (1884).
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"Published for the Conference of Professors of Preventive Medicine as Part 2 of the Journal of Medical Education, October, 1953."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Reprinted from the Journal of the American Medical Association. Dec. 30, 1905.
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Foreword, by W. L. Bryan.-History of Indiana university, by D. D. Banta.-The American university: today and tomorrow, by J. G. Schurman.-Researches on Spirochaeta pallida, by A. S Warthin.-The university medical school and the state, by A. S. Warthin.-Graduate medical education: experience with the Minnesota plan, by E. P. Lyon.-The Thomas Jefferson theory of education, by S. M. Ralston.-The state university and business, by Evans Woollen.-The state university at the opening of the twentieth century, by E. A. Birge.-The functions of the state university, by Paul Shorey.-The obligation of the state toward scientific research, by J. R. Angell.-The future of legal education, by Roscoe Pound.-A present need in American professional education, by R. A. Millikan.-Spiritual frontiersmen, by F. J. McConnell.-The spiritual idea of the iniversity, by Sir Robert A. Falconer.-The centennial commencement.
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Dissection room for male students, second floor of the Anatomical Laboratory, used between 1889 and 1903 (source: Not Just Any Medical School by Horace W. Davenport.)
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Operating course in the surgical laboratory. Trephining and amputation at the hip and shoulder joints of a cadaver. Cyrenus Darling is the instructor standing second from left (source: Not Just Any Medical School by Horace W. Davenport).
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Daybook, image #66