Medical Student-and Resident-Authored Publications in Academic Medicine from 2002 to 2016: A Growing Trend and Its Implications

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Abstract

Purpose The extent of medical trainees' engagement in scholarly medical education publication is not well described. This study sought to quantify the prevalence of medical student-and resident-authored medical education publications over 15 years, a benchmark essential for understanding current and future trends in trainee scholarship. Method Of 91 identified journals, 16 met inclusion criteria as indexed general medical education journals. Only Academic Medicine provided complete author role information, allowing identification of medical student and resident authors. The authors retrospectively compiled and analyzed citation records from Academic Medicine from 2002 to 2016, tracking trainee authorship, author position, and publication type. Results A total of 6,280 publications were identified, of which 4,635 publications, by 16,068 authors, met inclusion criteria. Trainees were 6.0% (966/16,068) of all authors and authored 14.5% (673/4,635) of all publications. Trainee authorship rates varied by publication type: Trainees authored 33.3% (160/480) of medical humanities publications versus 6.9% (27/392) of commentaries. From 2002-2004 to 2014-2016, the proportion of authors who were trainees increased from 3.9% (73/1,853) to 7.1% (330/4,632) (P

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APA

Munzer, B. W., Griffith, M., Townsend, W. A., & Burk-Rafel, J. (2019). Medical Student-and Resident-Authored Publications in Academic Medicine from 2002 to 2016: A Growing Trend and Its Implications. Academic Medicine, 94(3), 404–411. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002466

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