The physician-scientist has long occupied a unique place in medicine — bridging the laboratory and the clinic, translating scientific discoveries into innovative patient care. But that role is becoming increasingly rare. The number of physicians involved in research has steadily declined over the past 50 years, raising concerns about the future of a workforce critical to improving human health.
A new study from Yale School of Medicine (YSM), published in JAMA Network Open, seeks to understand how the physician-scientist pipeline begins — and where it may be faltering. In a national analysis of more than 1,100 first-year medical students, Sarwat Chaudhry, MD, Alexandra Hajduk, PhD, MPH, and their colleagues looked at the factors that influence early interest in research careers. Their findings, from the ongoing NIH-funded Longitudinal Evaluation of Research Career Intentions Among Medical Students (LEAP) study led by Chaudhry and Dowin Boatright, MD, a physician-scientist at NYU Langone, suggest that these career paths are not fixed and can change earlier in training than previously thought.
For Chaudhry, professor of medicine (general internal medicine) and associate dean in YSM’s Office of Student Research (OSR), and Hajduk, research scientist (geriatrics) and deputy director of scientific affairs in OSR, the urgency of the question is grounded in experience.