Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Feasibility of a Dual Neurosurgeon-Scientist Career in Canada: A Survey Study

2013; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 40; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s031716710001458x

ISSN

2057-0155

Autores

Fady Girgis,

Tópico(s)

Diversity and Career in Medicine

Resumo

Performing 'good work' in either neurosurgery or neuroscience alone is a challenge. Despite this, a large number of neurosurgeons divide their careers between the two fields, and attempt to excel in both arenas simultaneously. The purpose of this study is to explore perceptions on whether it is possible to do good work in both neurosurgery and research simultaneously, or whether one field suffers at the expense of the other.This question was put to practicing neurosurgeons via an electronic survey that was distributed to resident and staff neurosurgeons in Canada.54 surgeons completed the survey, 32 of whom were current or intended neurosurgeon-scientists. Themes explored through the survey included motives behind the pursuit or absence of research in one's neurosurgical career, the quality and feasibility of a dual career, and alternatives to one individual assuming a dual role.The opinions obtained revealed that it is possible to do good work in both neurosurgery and neuroscience simultaneously, but in reality it is very difficult to do. Alternatives to this dual career, such as collaboration between clinical neurosurgeons and pure scientists for example, may help bridge the gap between clinical and research arenas.

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