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Voss, Andreas ; Andreß, Björn ; Pauzenberger, Leo ; Herbst, Elmar ; Pogorzelski, Jonas ; John, Dominik ; Smolen, Daniel ; Roessler, Philip P. ; Tobert, Daniel G. ; Sieker, Jakob T.

Research productivity during orthopedic surgery residency correlates with pre‑planned and protected research time: a survey of German‑speaking countries

Voss, Andreas , Andreß, Björn, Pauzenberger, Leo, Herbst, Elmar, Pogorzelski, Jonas, John, Dominik, Smolen, Daniel, Roessler, Philip P., Tobert, Daniel G. und Sieker, Jakob T. (2020) Research productivity during orthopedic surgery residency correlates with pre‑planned and protected research time: a survey of German‑speaking countries. Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy 29, S. 292-299.

Veröffentlichungsdatum dieses Volltextes: 05 Feb 2021 09:23
Artikel
DOI zum Zitieren dieses Dokuments: 10.5283/epub.44628


Zusammenfassung

Purpose The purpose of this study was to identify modifiable factors associated with research activity among residents working in orthopedic surgery and traumatology. Methods Residents at 796 university-affiliated hospitals in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland were invited to participate. The online survey consisted of questions that ascertained 13 modifiable and 17 non-modifiable factors ...

Purpose The purpose of this study was to identify modifiable factors associated with research activity among residents working in orthopedic surgery and traumatology. Methods Residents at 796 university-affiliated hospitals in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland were invited to participate. The online survey consisted of questions that ascertained 13 modifiable and 17 non-modifiable factors associated with the residents' current research activities. Responses of 129 residents were analyzed. Univariate linear regression was used to determine the association of individual factors with the current research activity (hours per week). The impact of significant non-modifiable factors (with unadjustedpvalues < 0.05) was controlled for using multivariate linear regression. Results The univariate analysis demonstrated six non-modifiable factors that were significantly associated with the current research activity: a University hospital setting (p < 0.001), an A-level hospital setting (p = 0.024), Swiss residents (p = 0.0012), the completion of a dedicated research year (p = 0.007), female gender (p = 0.016), and the department's size (p = 0.048). Multivariate regression demonstrated that the number of protected research days per year (p < 0.029) and the percentage of protected days, that were known 1 week before (p < 0.001) or the day before (p < 0.001), were significantly associated with a higher research activity. Conclusions As hypothesized, more frequent and predictable protected research days were associated with higher research activity among residents in orthopedic surgery and traumatology.



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Details

DokumentenartArtikel
Titel eines Journals oder einer ZeitschriftKnee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
Verlag:Springer
Ort der Veröffentlichung:NEW YORK
Band:29
Seitenbereich:S. 292-299
Datum17 April 2020
InstitutionenMedizin > Lehrstuhl für Unfallchirurgie
Identifikationsnummer
WertTyp
10.1007/s00167-020-05983-wDOI
Stichwörter / KeywordsResearch; Orthopedic surgery training; Traumatology training; Residency
Dewey-Dezimal-Klassifikation600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften > 610 Medizin
StatusVeröffentlicht
BegutachtetJa, diese Version wurde begutachtet
An der Universität Regensburg entstandenZum Teil
URN der UB Regensburgurn:nbn:de:bvb:355-epub-446281
Dokumenten-ID44628

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