Introduction: Successful mentorship programs in academic medicine correlate with increased achievement in scholarly activities, leadership, and academic advancement for faculty members, as well as reduced burnout. Despite these benefits, the traditional mentorship model may be underutilized due to challenges of time constraints and alignment in goals. Furthermore, women and underrepresented in medicine (UriM) physicians are less likely to have mentorship, perpetuating the gap in the diversity of academic faculty in leadership and career advancement. To address this, we created an innovative mentorship model for busy academic faculty physicians using a virtual academic asynchronous mentoring video platform.
CITATION STYLE
Yin, M., McManus, M., Dawson, N., Tolaymat, L., Prier, C. C., Tan, W., … Hedges, M. S. (2023). Virtual Academic Asynchronous Mentoring (VAAM) for Faculty Physicians: An Innovative Mentorship. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.51289
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