Mentoring New and Early-Stage Investigators and Underrepresented Minority Faculty for Research Success in Health-Related Fields: An Integrative Literature Review (2010–2020)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Question
2.2. Faculty Categories
2.3. Literature Search
2.3.1. Search Strategy
2.3.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
3. Results
3.1. Summary of Search Results
3.2. Characteristics of Included Studies
3.3. Barriers to Developing Research Capacity
3.3.1. Individual Barriers to Research Success
3.3.2. Institutional Barriers to Research Success
3.4. Facilitators for Developing Research Capacity
3.4.1. Technical Skills That Facilitate Research Capacity
3.4.2. Interpersonal Skills That Facilitate Research Success
3.4.3. Personal Skills That Facilitate Research Success
3.4.4. Institutional Facilitators of Research Success
4. Discussion
4.1. Individual and Institutional Barriers to Research Mentoring
4.2. Individual (Technical, Interpersonal, and Personal) Facilitators of Research Mentoring
4.3. Institutional Facilitators of Mentoring for Research Success
4.4. Limitations
4.5. Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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[Reference Number] Author(s) (Year) | Study Design, Purpose, and Methods | Participants (Diversity, Faculty Category) and Any Additional Results | Barriers to Research | Facilitators of Research | OTHER: Limitations, Future Research Directions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[44] Beech et al. (2020) | Design: Descriptive, qualitative Purpose: Examine research challenges of early career faculty from HBCUs (teaching-intensive institutions) Methods: 90 min discussions of barriers to research, overcoming barriers, experiences with research mentors, factors facilitating research | Participants: ESI and research leaders from HBCUs in Mississippi and Baltimore, MD | Barriers: (1) Access to resource; (2) bias; (3) heavy teaching and advising load | Facilitator: (1) Engaging students of color in research—may stimulate future interest in research | Future Directions: These findings were utilized to develop their research training and mentoring program |
[45] Berget et al. (2010) | Design:
Descriptive, mixed methods, program evaluation Purpose: Evaluate Summer Research Career Development Institute (SRCDI) which teaches emerging minority investigators research skills
Methods: Post-program eval. of 2 institutes with questionnaire and oral feedback; second questionnaire 12 months after completing institute | Participants: 55 post-docs or junior faculty researching in health equity from the U Pittsburgh–Jackson State U partnership | Barriers: (1) Treated as “token hires” or “ethnic specialists” (vs. experts); (2) isolation and chilly campus climate; (3) shortage of mentors; (4) spending valuable time on committees; (5) no access to informal networks; (6) majority faculty determine merits of academic endeavors | Facilitators: (1) Survival skills classes; (2) problem-based learning to facilitate research ideas; (3) scientific autobiography from sr. minority faculty; (4) junior faculty panel; (5) writing/publication strategies; (6) network of peers; (7) MOST USEFUL: mock reviews, presentation practice, networking | |
[43] Blanchard et al. (2019) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Report outcomes of an junior minority faculty mentoring program from 2008 to present Methods: 18-question survey + qualitative interviews | Participants: Junior and senior members of NMRI | Facilitators: (1) Prof. and personal mentors; (2) mock study sections; (3) support for writing NIH grants; (4) P and T feedback; (5) grant/manuscript writing and mgmt. | Future Directions: Study to determine whether annual program feedback is correlated with career advancement | |
[46] Brewer et al. (2016) | Design: Qualitative Purpose: Examine needs, challenges, contributions, and successes in mentoring for underrepresented early career faculty | Participants: 4 Black early career investigators + 15 underrepresented investigators from the U.S. | Barriers: (1) No mentor network; (2) unstructured mentorship; (3) mentor mismatches; (4) failing to balance service/research opportunities | Facilitators: (1) Mentor–mentee match; (2) network of mentors invested in mentee success; (3) guidance for navigating political landscape; (4) institutional supports | |
[47] Buist et al. (2017) | Design:
Descriptive
Purpose: Describe the goals and components of the CRN program. Methods: 26 month program to increase capacity for cancer research; scholars ID mentoring and workshop needs | Participants: 28 junior investigators from 14 CRN sites or academic centers | Facilitators: (1) Protected research time and buyout; (2) multiple mentors—who receive credit for effort; (3) planned activities; (4) research skill development; (5) multisite collaboration—exposes scholars to more expertise; (6) virtual data warehouse | Limitation: Hard to tease out which components contributed to success since this was an evaluation and not an experimental design | |
[48] Byington et al. (2016) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Describe clinical and translational scholars (CATS) mentoring program Methods: 2 years of mentorship for ESI engaged in biomed. rsh. transitioning to PI. Faculty nominated by chairs/deans and receive at least 30% effort for research | Participants: 86 scholars accepted between 2008 and 2015 Results: 46% female, 10% UMF; 92% had extramural funding by program graduation; 99% remained in academic medicine | Barriers: (1) Cost to run the program—BUT based on grants awarded, return on investment of the CATS program is more than 20 to 1 | Facilitators: (1) Move away from dyadic mentoring toward mentoring networks | Limitations: Reporting data for single-center study and short follow up for each scholar |
[49] Campbell et al. (2013) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Summarize outcomes of career training and research practices by faculty from teaching-intensive, minority serving institutions through a visiting professorship (VP) program Methods: Faculty receive 8–10 weeks training in the labs of host scientists at research-intensive institutions | Participants: 32 participants, 60% female, majority Black and Hispanic, and from 1997 to 2008 93% URM Results: More independently productive than matched peers | Facilitators: (1) Modest annual financial investment (~$6000/person) and workshop offered; (2) commitment of host scientists; (3) willingness of home institution to allow program; (4) large professional associations focused on minority success | ||
[50] Cohen et al. (2012) | Design: Case control Purpose: Identify characteristics of successful mentoring programs Methods: Institution categorized based on # of plenary research presentations at Nat’l convention over 6 years; questionnaires for mentors and mentees | Participants: 159 professors (97 mentors) and research fellows (62 mentees) at Career Stage: mostly male mentors (Sr) and female mentees (ESI) | Facilitators: (1) Protected research time; (2) easy, formal program that connects mentors and mentees with similar research interests; (3) feedback on research; (4) mentee progress reports required (accountability) | Limitation: 46% response rate (although comparable to other published studies) | |
[51] Comeau et al. (2017) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Evaluate the impact of the NIH National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) Mentored Clinical Research Scholar (CRS) Program Award K12 and the ACTSI KL2-Mentored Clinical and Translational Research Scholars program Methods: Mentored clinical research training. Quantitative: demographics, publications, grants. Qualitative: interviews | Participants: Junior faculty physicians at Emory University interested in clinical/translational science careers Results: 46 ESI have been supported by K12 and KL2 programs (65% women, 22% underrepresented minority; 100% reported they were very satisfied with the program | Facilitators: (1) Mentors = significant role in idea generation, study planning, and design of research studies; and review of grant drafts and manuscripts; (2) mentoring teams were helpful to long-term career success; (3) a funding mechanism; (4) protection of time; (5) quality of training provided | Future Directions: (1) More research methods classes related to diverse populations; (2) more opportunities to learn about software programs; (3) debrief with program administration; (4) add opps. for timely feedback | |
[52] Cross et al. (2019) | Design: Literature review of papers from 2000 to 2018 (n = 27 studies and 8055 women) Purpose: Uncover factors associated with effective mentoring of female health academics, the consequences inadequate mentoring, and gaps in knowledge | Barriers: (1) Personal/relational dynamics (e.g., variable quality of mentors and incongruent assignment of mentors, power dynamics); (2) lack of senior women; (3) time to mentor | Facilitators: (1) Mentor availability and expertise; (2) supportive relationships (mutuality, responsiveness to needs) | ||
[53] Cruz et al. (2020) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Share results of the first 3 years of Transdisciplinary Research, Equity and Engagement (TREE) Pilot Program Methods: Pilot funding awarded (up to $50,000) to conduct behavioral health disparity research. PIs develop mentoring plans for a mentor. TREE leadership also mentors pilot PIs individually | Participants: 10 projects awarded: 6 female, 5 Hispanic/Latinx, 1 Native American, 1 sexual minority Results: All PIs engaged with community partners on research and disseminating results | Barriers: (1) Difficult to accomplish work in 1 year time frame; (2) lack of designated time for PIs to devote to pilot projects; (3) difficulty integrating pilot research into other TREE Center activities | Facilitators: (1) Mentors willing to mentor UMF; (2) mentors who engage w/community; (3) dedication of mentor/mentee; (4) network diverse faculty from two campuses; (5) have an academic and community mentor; (6) bimonthly research roundtables | Future Directions: (1) Provide more access to grant and manuscript reviewers who are subject matter experts; (2) connect investigators to community partners; (3) address institutional challenges |
[54] Doyle et al. (2019): | Design: Literature review Purpose: Provide an overview of research focused on mentoring practices and related outcomes in OT Methods: 1313 studies found and 20 reviewed | Participants: OT students and professionals including clinicians, educators, and researchers | Facilitators: (1) Create plan, adhere to expectations, meet frequently; (2) use goal setting, problem solving, resource sharing, critical thinking, reflection; (3) provide support (trust, commitment, respect) | Future Directions: (1) Define mentoring and develop std. measures; (2) describe theoretical background; (3) expand beyond XS research | |
[55] Duncan et al. (2016) | Design: Qualitative Purpose: Identify issues that impact the training and retention of underrepresented individuals in biomedical research Methods: 5 independent focus groups covered 5 topics affecting UMF in biomedical sciences | Participants: ESI invited to workshop Results: Effectiveness of current NHLBI diversity programs = increased independence; early programs important for skill development; need to support key aspects of institution mission | Barriers: (1) Socioeconomic. Challenges (cost of living, high student debt, lack of child care, sacrificing career for family, health insurance, retirement benefits). (2) Non-PI career paths in research (limited opps. for R1s in teaching institution) | Facilitators: (1) Academic community promoting diversity: networking; multitiered mentoring approach; (2) NHLBI diversity programs (mock grant reviews; helpful info from successful scientists); (3) find research “niche” and secure funding | Future Directions: (1) Use online technology to facilitate collaborations; (2) incentives for mentors; (3) ID mentors within NHLBI community; (4) form partnerships with other scientific societies |
[56] Efstathiou et al. (2018) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Assess short (pre–post) and long-term (7 years post) impact of a formal mentor program on junior faculty satisfaction and productivity in academic medicine Methods: Prospective longitudinal intervention (2009–2016); 3 formal training sessions over 9 months + regular informal meetings | Participants: 23 junior faculty mentees who participated vs. 91 junior faculty controls; from radiation oncology, anesthesia, critical care, pain management | Facilitators: (1) Ask mentees to rank their top 5 areas of professional development need and mentors to rank their top 5 mentoring strengths and pair them; (2) provide training to mentors; (3) provide guidance on how mentee and mentor can collaborate on joint expectations, goals and timelines | Limitations: Small sample size, unmeasured confounders Future Directions: More longitudinal and intervention studies | |
[57] Espino and Zambrana (2019) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Perceptions of 58 URM faculty employed at U.S. research-extensive universities on mentoring Methods: Focus group and individual interviews and survey data from RWJF National Faculty Survey | Participants: 58 UMF (African American, Mexican American, and Puerto Rican at the Asst/Assoc Prof rank) employed at predominately white U.S. research-extensive universities; mixed research disciplines including health | Barriers: (1) Working more hours/week; (2) older age; (3) organizational value of independence | Facilitators: (1) Formal + informal mentoring; (2) match pairs—including on racial/ethnic concordance; (3) mentoring viewed as a partnership vs. hierarchy; (4) mentors trained; (5) meet regularly; (6) career-related and psychosocial mentoring; (7) strong mentor commitment; (8) mentoring outcomes assessed | Limitations: XS design; voluntary nature of participants = possible selection bias and social desirability of responses; Native Americans not included Future Directions: Explore impact of the different types of mentoring |
[58] Felder et al. (2019): | Design: Descriptive, quantitative Purpose: Explore differences in the personal characteristics, mentoring, training, and scholarly productivity of a diverse sample of trainees in the US by NIH underrepresented status Methods: Web-based questionnaire | Participants: Students, post-docs, faculty from 23 NCI/NIH-funded CNPCs Results: Sharing personal or cultural characteristics with CNPC mentor is extremely important to URF | Barriers: (1) UMF were more likely to be first-generation college graduates; (2) UMF with higher satisfaction with work–life balance and current position less likely to have grant funding | Facilitators: (1) 38% of CNPC mentors also first-generation college graduates; (2) having ≥1 mentor was a significant predictor productivity outcomes | Limitations: Cross-sectional analysis. No examination of previous mentoring experiences, only CNPC experiences |
[59] Feldman et al. (2010) | Design: Descriptive quantitative Purpose: Determine characteristics associated with having a mentor, the association of mentoring with self-efficacy, and the content of mentor–mentee interactions Methods: 38-item, web-based survey | Participants: Pre-tenure faculty (n = 464) in dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy, mostly white (62%) and female (53%) | Facilitators: (1) Finding mentor themselves; (2) research faculty line vs. clinical line; (3) top 10 topics: obtaining funding/grants, writing manuscripts/grants, research design, career planning, Tenure & Promotion expectations, time management, pres., networking | Limitations: Prior programs had small sample sizes, were informally organized, and had difficulty with long-term sustainability | |
[60] Flores et al. (2016) | Design:
Descriptive
Purpose: Discuss 6 “hot topics” related to research success in young ethnically diverse investigators Methods: The Research in Academic Pediatrics Initiative on Diversity (RAPID) convention held a “Hot Topic” session covering 6 topics on research success | Participants: 10 young ethnically diverse investigators and 5 senior investigators | Barriers: (1) Racism and discrimination; (2) coping with isolation as a minority faculty member; (3) lack of clarity about T & P requirements | Facilitators: (1) Protected time for research—with concrete steps, timelines, and outcomes; (2) professional and personal mentoring—internal and external to your university; (3) social support; (4) applying for RFAs for NIH grant opportunities for minorities | |
[61] Flores et al. (2020) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Evaluate the RAPID program Methods: Small research grants awarded ($15,000 for 1 year), with mentoring, networking and career development | Participants: 10 scholars (8 women, 6 Latinos, 3 AAs from 8 institutions) from first 4 cohorts | Facilitators: (1) Funding for grants ($15,000/year); (2) mentoring by senior investigators; (3) networking and career development at annual conference; (4) monthly mentoring | Limitations: Evaluation was not conducted as an RCT, small sample size | |
[62] Flores et al. (2019) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Provide a guide to academic success for URM young investigators using the 2018 RAPID conference panel discussion Methods: 6 key questions using an expert panel | Participants: Heterogeneous panel of experts representing both genders, multiple races/ethnicities and geographic diversity across the U.S. | Facilitators: (1) Multiple mentors; (2) write prolifically; (3) persistence and fail productively; (4) debrief with colleagues; (5) seek non-traditional funding streams; (6) balance committee work with research; (7) ask for resources (protected research time); (8) handle implicit bias professionally and respond immediately; (9) serve on an NIH study section | ||
[63] Harawa et al. (2017) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Discuss optimal approaches for mentoring programs for URMs in health research careers in the resource Centers for Minority Aging Research (RCMAR) program | Participants: 361 scholars from 12 centers. 66% members of UMF groups, 72% women, 80% remain in academia Results: Centers outlined their approach to selecting, training, and matching mentors, training scholars, evaluation, and addressing issues prevalent among URM scholars | Barriers: (1) Small number of scholars and mentors in each center; (2) worried about lack of anonymity in evaluations that leads to negative consequences (one center replaced evaluation surveys with facilitated, focus group-like discussions among scholars—more informative). | Facilitators: (1) Centers rely on multidisciplinary mentoring teams; (2) formal scholar training provided by all centers; (3) RCMAR scholars later served as RCMAR faculty; (4) mentoring continues between scholar cohorts; (5) regular contact (monthly); (6) accountability = formal agreements between mentors and scholars; (7) attend designated trainings to share work with other RCMAR folks | |
[64] Hemming et al. (2019) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Provide a picture of national applicant pool and test for differences between underrepresented groups (URGs) and well-represented groups (WRGs) and institution type (MSI or minority serving institution vs. other) in variables that might influence an investigator’s success in developing, submitting, and acquiring research grant proposals | Participants: 880 people who submitted online applications to join an NRMN Grantsmanship Program Results: 50% URGs, 65% female. URGs published < articles, spent < time on grants, and research than WRGs; MSI faculty < likely to have collaborators in their research area and < time to conduct research | Barriers: (1) No release time or buy out for research; (2) less expertise relative to obtaining federal funding; (3) UMF less likely to report access to research resources (core facilities to conduct research and reside in a department where majority of faculty had external funding) | Facilitators: (1) Link URGs to networks where they can collaborate and access facilities that advance their work; (2) increase access to professional development programs that prioritize skill development and intentional efforts to embed URGs in pertinent research networks; (3) negotiate release time | |
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | Design: Mixed methods Purpose: Report preliminary results on mentee’s satisfaction with institute components and academic success contrasting two specific outcomes (# of pubs and grant awards) before matriculation, during, and upon program completion Methods: Programmatic activities = Summer I sessions, mid-year meeting, monthly webinars, and Summer II sessions. Quantitative data from web-based evaluation system and qualitative data from interviews/focus groups with 17 mentees | Participants: 29 URM mentees from 15 US institutions selected for participation in NYU PRIDE Institute. 66% female, 79% Black, 17% Hispanic, and 4% White with disability Results: Lectures were effective and interesting. Mentoring important. Overall proposals submitted to the NIH increased during and after completing the institute. Growth in # of mentees submitting grant applications or publication records related to increased academic self-efficacy | Barriers: (1) Challenges experienced by UMF were fundamentally different than non-URM colleagues; (2) being the only URM faculty member = isolated and misunderstood; (3) colleagues do not talk about work in terms of scholarship and service, they talk about it in terms of dollars | Facilitators: (1) PRIDE helped combat feelings of marginalization and provided opportunity to step away from grind and refocus/rekindle desire to conduct research; (2) PRIDE referred to as “safe space to learn and make mistakes”; (3) URM PRIDE staff understood the mentees experience; (4) PRIDE helped enhance skills related to grant writing, networking, publishing, identifying mentors, presentation skills and developing research agendas, and long-term career plans; (5) PRIDE mentoring was unique—mentors shared experiences and engaged with mentees 1:1 and in groups | Future Directions: (1) Establishment of a program management tool (e.g., blackboard); (2) establishment of a step-by-step protocol for identifying external mentors; (3) incorporating strategies for negotiating a mentoring relationship; (4) long-term support beyond the PRIDE academic year |
[66] Mancuso et al. (2019) | Design:
Qualitative
Purpose: Highlight faculty perceptions about mentoring Methods: Semi-structured interviews, grounded theory, constant comparative analytic strategy | Participants: 22 experienced research mentors from a variety of disciplines within academic medicine | Barrier: (1) Lack of time | Facilitators: (1) Match personality of mentor and mentee; (2) institutional acknowledgment of mentoring efforts; (3) continuing education relative to mentoring skills; (4) examine short- and long-term goals of mentee; (5) formalize a plan with template and regular check ins; (6) evaluate mentor and mentee | Limitations: (1) Featured 1 institution; (2) participants mentored trainees at junior ranks, so answers are specific to that rank; (3) focused only on research mentoring in academic medicine |
[67] Manson (2016) | Design:
Essay, editorial
Purpose: Discuss how individual and institutional mentoring contributes to success of early stage investigators | Barriers: (1) Putting the majority of responsibility for success on the mentee’s individual skills (vs. also considering environment, resources, climate, and connections) | Facilitators: (1) Share mentoring plan with mentee’s supervisors; (2) work smarter—integrate work across teaching, research and service; (3) mentees and mentors developed sociograms of the structure and patterns of key group interactions, reflecting work relations, channels of influence and lines of communication; (4) evaluate | ||
[68] Martina et al. (2014) | Design:
Descriptive
Purpose: Describe experience in a Clinical Translational Science Award (CTSA) institution on development, implementation and evaluation of hybrid online mentoring curriculum for CTSA trainees Methods: Mentee completes Academic Career Development Plan (ADCP); mentor completed an online questionnaire within 6 weeks of completing program | Participants:
20 women and 73 men in academic medicine who completed the mentor course and served as mentors
Results: Online format is useful; three strengths of this format: convenience, engagement, and financial sustainability; mentors valued the course regardless of experience | Facilitators: (1) Mentors who are accessible, engaged, supportive, and affirming; (2) limit number of mentees; (3) teaching and training of skills; (4) clarity of performance via an academic career development plan (ACDP); (5) sponsorship, share power and protect; (6) demystify academia; (7) challenge and encourage risk taking; (8) provide feedback; (9) self-disclosure; (10) affirm and nurture the dream | ||
[69] Masterson et al. (2019) | Design: Descriptive, quantitative, program evaluation Purpose: Evaluate Columbia University Mentor Peer Aging Research (CoMPAdRE) program for ESI using the Reach Effectiveness Adoption Implementation and Maintenance Framework (RE-AIM) Methods: Program developed using RE-AIM framework; effectiveness based on career successes obtained via survey | Participants:
15 post-doc and early career participants from 5 states across 6 medical specialties
Results: 93% were federally funded as NIH PIs; 91% agreed or strongly agreed that the program was instrumental in helping them develop careers | Barriers: (1) Traditional dyadic model can be challenging due to scarcity of expertise in certain areas; (2) maintaining relationship over time is difficult—requires considerable investment by both partners; (3) difficulty balancing competing clinical, administrative and research demands | Facilitators: (1) Use a variety of mentoring models; (2) alignment around their primary research topic (i.e., aging); (3) small group size and frequent interaction with speakers—who talked freely about their career path; (4) teach leadership and executive skills not typically taught in doctoral work | Limitations:
(1) Faculty across the nation participated, which made it more expensive; (2) lack of diversity in first year of cohort—addressed in 2nd year; (3) 13% attrition
Future Directions: More than one mentor to assist a cadre of mentees |
[70] Milburn et al. (2019) | Design:
Descriptive, mixed methods
Purpose: Describe a NIDA/NIH mentoring training program within the UCLA HIV/AIDS, Substance Abuse and Trauma Training program (HA-STTP) Methods: Short- and long-term assessments | Participants:
20 scholars with background in medicine, psychology, public health
Evaluation: Regular surveys + 3 outside evaluators (annual review); each scholar assessed by mentors Results: > 70% submitted grant proposals and 1st authored papers | Facilitators: (1) Protected time; (2) first authored publications; (3) grants and serving on NIH study sections; (4) density of collaborative networks; (5) grounding curricula in cultural humility; (6) mentoring emerging colleagues; (7) significant planned time with mentors; (8) baseline assessment to plan sessions; (9) regular meetings | ||
[71] Ofili et al. (2013) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Describe the mechanism CTSA created to foster formal collaborations between research intensive universities and MSIs Methods: Morehouse School of Medicine and Emory University proposed a CTSA/RCMI collaborative national mentoring model. Social network tools used to connect underrepresented students and ESI with experienced mentors | Participants: Emory, Morehouse Georgetown, Howard, UCLA, Charles Drew U, Vanderbilt, Meharry Medical College Cornell, Hunter College Results: Partnerships facilitate research and career development; multiple collaborative pilot studies, and participation in designing and implementing research programs is helpful | Facilitators: (1) Address health disparities together; (2) develop scientific methods through conferences; (3) provide funding when access to minority population is feasible or when rare disease is investigated; (4) form health disparities working groups; (5) promote more diverse participation in clinical research; (6) use interactive videoconferencing technologies for activities, and promote and maintain long-distance collaboration; (7) expand community partnerships | ||
[72] Pfund et al. (2016) | Design: Literature review Purpose: Propose core attributes of effective mentoring relationships, supported by literature, and suggested by theoretical models of academic persistence and propose ways to measure these variables Methods: Provide theoretical basis and ways to assess core attributes of effective mentoring in 5 categories: research, interpersonal, psychosocial and career, cultural responsiveness and diversity, and sponsorship | Participants: Emerging researchers from diverse populations | Facilitators: (1) Research: disciplinary and technical skills, ethical research, self-efficacy; (2) Interpersonal: active listening, align expectations, build trust; (3) Psychosocial and Career: motivation, coping, science identity, belonging; (4) Cultural Responsiveness and Diversity: equity and inclusion, cultural responsibility, reduce impact of bias and stereotypes; (5) Sponsorship: foster independence, promote prof. develop., grow networks, advocate | Future Directions: (1) Examine how mentoring complexities (e.g., race, ethnicity, gender) impact effectiveness; (2) develop assessments of effectiveness of research mentoring at various career stages; (3) conduct meta-analyses (based on theory) | |
[73] Redmond (2020) | Design: Presentation at NIH Regional Seminar (Oct 2020) Purpose: Define networking, identify networking benefits, potential members, opportunities and strategies | Facilitators: (1) Build relationships for emotional, instrumental, informational and appraisal support; (2) develop networks: navigator (org. dynamics), sponsor (networking), coach (prof. behavior), and confidant (listens); (3) find people who help get the job done, advance career goals, and provide personal support; (4) set and revisit goals, negotiate meeting frequency, establish desired modes of communication and fdbk. prefs. | |||
[74] Shea et al. (2011) | Design: Descriptive, mixed methods Purpose: Explore academic medical perspectives on how career development awardees are selected and mentored Methods: Survey administered at 2010 APM Winter meeting, followed by focus groups | Participants: Chairs of U.S. Internal Medicine Departments (n = 66) and Directors of CTSA centers (n = 23) (NOTE: These leaders are responsible for 25,000 junior faculty in academic medicine) | Facilitators: (1) Grant and manuscript writing and mgmt. workshops; (2) identify mentor before applying for funding; (3) seek bridge funding to move to independent funding; (4) important mentor roles: reviewing and editing, career negotiation and development, accountability and clear and timely communication; (5) number of pubs as senior author in high-impact journals; (6) passion | Limitations: Small sample; possible selection bias Future Directions: Better measures of mentoring effectiveness (test training and curricula); better rewards for mentoring | |
[75] Shiramizu et al. (2016) | Design: Descriptive, mixed methods Purpose: Success of Pilot Project Program (PPP) at U Hawaii RCTR for advancing careers of emerging investigators and commun. Collaborators Methods: Interviews with PPP investigators; analyzed infrastructure, awards, collaborations, advocacy and scientific impact, contributions made | Participants: 17/18 who received PPP participated in study Results: 17 PPP PIs had 47 grants (34 completed after receiving pilot funds) | Facilitators: (1) Assistance with grant administration; (2) prof. development opps.; (3) collaborations and partnerships; (4) access to biomedical informatics; (5) access to clinical research resources and facilities; (6) community-based research design and biostats; (7) regulatory knowledge and evaluation | ||
[76] Snyder-Mackler (2015) | Design:
Descriptive, presentation, essay
Purpose: Describe the barriers to entry into formal research training for DPT students and practicing PTs Methods: Award recipient presentation turned into manuscript | Barriers: (1) Educational debt; (2) desire to practice clinically; (3) lack of knowledge about conducting research studies; (4) mean percentage of time core PT faculty spend on scholarship is 20%; (5) “The only way to be sure you won’t get funded is to not submit!”; (6) heavy teaching requirements at non R1 institutions and within clinical programs | Facilitators:
(1) Training grant to defray cost of education; (2) NIH Funded Comprehensive Opportunities in Rehabilitation Research Training (CORRT)—collective effort of 9 universities;
(3) strategic alliances to survive competitive culture; (4) parental accommodation policy—so women/parents will not be dissuaded from academic life; (5) adjust teaching loads to include supervision of student research and independent scholarship; (6) strong team mentoring; (7) leadership that values research/mentoring, listens to ideas, and sets high expectations | ||
[77] Sorkness et al. (2017) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Describe structure and activities of the National Research Mentoring Network (NRMN) Methods: NRMN activities (a) based on theory, (b) address bias, (c) focus on the preparation of mentors and mentees, (d) build community, and (e) include different modes of training Diversity Program Consortium (DPC) = BUILD = building infrastructure leading to diversity; CEC = coordination and evaluation center; NRMN = National Research Mentoring Network | Barriers: (1) UMF trainees receive less mentoring than their non-minority peers; (2) lack of understanding about institutional requirements and lack of institutional support; (3) failure to consider social, cultural and environmental factors that impact productivity—especially at white institutions (e.g., marginalization, overt/covert racism, involvement in non-career-enhancing activities) | Facilitators: (1) Align expectations between mentor and mentee; (2) emphasize communication; (3) address equity and inclusion; (4) theory-based (social cognitive theory) with attention to formation of science and cultural identity across faculty developmental stages; (5) authentically address bias, stereotype threat, and cultural ignorance; (6) focus on preparation of both mentors and mentees; (7) community building focus; (8) multimodal training formats | Future Directions: Need additional research to determine which types of mentoring relationships (dyads, peers) and which modes of mentoring (formal, informal) have the most impact on success, conditioned by context and career stage | |
[78] Stamatakis et al. (2013) | Design: Descriptive, quantitative Purpose: Outline perceived usefulness, importance of and barriers to developing as an ESI in dissemination and implementation research Methods: survey questions sent via email | Participants: 11 MD or PhD researchers with a background in mental health research | Facilitators: Mentors who help with: (1) developing links to practice settings (clinics and health depts) and collaborations with community partners; (2) balancing essential activities with those less valued by the academy; (3) training and technical assistance (e.g., grant writing, responding to reviewer feedback); (4) identifying productive research topics and providing data; (5) recommending supports (protected time, research assistants, committee burden, supervision of doctoral students, travel/training budget); (7) setting goals and being accountable | Limitations: Research is focused on U.S.-based faculty located in academic medical centers with traditional promotion policies Future Directions: Need to study impact of different styles of mentoring | |
[79] Stoff (2019) | Design: Descriptive, editorial Purpose: Describe mentoring programs that enhance diversity in the HIV research workforce, including the research education grant mechanism (R25) to promote new investigator development in HIV-related topics | Barriers: (1) Leaky pipeline—not knowing factors that influence ESI from diverse backgrounds to enter, exit and sustain a behavioral and biomedical career | Facilitators: (1) Community engagement and transdisciplinary team science; (2) technical expertise, career advice, and professional skills development (e.g, presentations, manuscripts, grants; leadership skills); (3) pilot projects with hands-on exposure to research; (4) leverage a variety of grants and mentors; (5) establish mentee proficiency in interdisciplinary competencies; (6) develop interinstitutional consortia partnerships | Limitations: Correlation data are limited in determining impact of R25 on publication/grant Future Directions: Analyze social networks for collaboration patterns; use theory to guide approaches; broaden pipeline of ESI backgrounds; propose asset models and leadership opportunities | |
[80] Sutton et al. (2013) | Design: Descriptive Purpose: Describe history and structure of Minority HIV/AIDS Research Initiative (MARI) and review data/accomplishments for MARI which supports underrepresented minority scientists performing HIV research in affected communities Methods: Review MARI impact from 2003 to 2013 | Participants: 27 scientist leaders who have HIV prevention interventions Results: Accomplishments: developed research programs in communities of color, obtaining more funding for research and programmatic work | Facilitators: (1) Release time for mentees and mentors; (2) forming a collaborative network of mentors in HIV prevention research; (3) sustained institutional and financial support of historically underrepresented scientists | ||
[81] Sweeney et al. (2017) | Design: QT, descriptive Purpose: Describe transition from mentored to independent research funding for clinical and translational scholars supported by institutional KL2 Mentored Career Develop. Programs Methods: Online survey examining characteristics of KL2 scholars in their from 2006 to 2013. Primary outcome variable was whether scholar had received independent funding as PI. | Participants: 48 respondents from institutions providing information about 914 KL2 scholars Results: 68% MDs, 19% non-clinician PhD, 53% female, 12% URM; amount of NIH funding an institution received was not predictive of an individual’s success transitioning to indep. research funding | Barriers: (1) Clinicians without a PhD are less likely to have independent funding after program | Facilitators: (1) Mentoring/support to scholars through CTSA core facilitates success of female and URM awardees compared with individual CDA mechanisms; (2) having a PhD at the time of KL2 appointment was positively associated with attaining independent funding | Future Directions: The NIH should consider a longer mentored program that combines KL2 training and K08/K23 training to fully prepare clinician-scholars for independent funding |
[82] Teruya et al. (2013) | Design: Literature review Purpose: Review faculty development programs and competencies (type, components, outcomes, limitations) Methods: Review of 19 mentoring intervention studies published in English between 2004 and 2013 | Participants: Researchers in biomedical sciences; 17 of 19 studies conducted in US and Puerto Rico | Facilitators: (1) Mentoring and guided or participatory learning = most successful; (2) variety of delivery methods for workshops was more enjoyable | Limitations: Info. delivered via lectures; no control group; hard to determine impact of prior research experience Future Research: Need prospective studies w/participants who are randomized and receive intervention or control; assessment w/standard, objective criteria | |
[83] Thorpe et al. (2020) | Design: Descriptive, quantitative Purpose: Assess program impact on grant writing self- efficacy Methods: Longitudinal, experimental study of 12 month intervention w/longitudinal follow up using grant self-efficacy scale focused on conceptualizing, designing and funding a grant | Participants: Trainees were post-docs, or ESI, mostly Black (62%), female (62%); Asst Profs (52%); 24% had no post-doc training | Facilitators: (1) After training, grant self-efficacy improved on all 3 domains | Limitations: Small sample size Future Directions: Need to study if increasing grant SE will translate to increased grant proficiency and productivity later in career | |
[84] Varkey et al. (2012) | Design: Descriptive, quantitative Purpose: Study the impact of facilitated peer mentoring on scholarly output (manuscripts submitted) and the impact of peer mentoring on self-efficacy of writing skills Methods: Longitudinal prog. eval. of a 12 month prog. with peer mentor groups and experienced faculty facilitating. Met every 2–4 weeks, to review and edit drafts, w/individual and project mentoring. Initial self-assessment repeated at end | Participants: 21 women faculty in Department of Medicine at Mayo Clinic holding rank of Instructor or Assistant professor Results: at end of 12 month project, manuscripts/grants increased + significant changes in satisfaction with academic accomplishments and confidence and motivates to accomplish goals | Barriers: (1) Program too short; (2) difficult to find time to meet | Facilitators: (1) Protected time for research; (2) having a good mentor; (3) introduction to broad scope of resources available; (4) mentors and mentees reported benefits; (5) identify plans to achieve career goals | Limitations: Long-term outcomes and sustainability not evaluated; project; did not compare faculty who participated to those who did not; program may have self-selected highly motivated individuals Future Directions: Extend duration of intervention and assess long-term outcomes |
[85] Velasquez et al. (2019) | Design: Descriptive, quantitative Purpose: Survey awardees of the Minority HIV Investigator Mentoring Program (MHIMP) of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Methods: Longitudinal evaluation of a 1 year program to help minority junior investigators jumpstart their careers as HIV investigators. Mentees choose a mentor, outline a 12 month career development plan and prepare a research proposal. Survey monkey platform delivered 35Q survey | Participants: 22/31 participants from 1996 to 2017 completed the survey Results: All but 1 performing medical or health sciences research, with 55% involved in HIV/AIDS or viral research; 91% had research funding (73% as PI); 95% mentor others in HIV-related research | Facilitators: (1) Provide 25% of mentee and 2.5% of mentor salary; (2) involvement with existing network of established investigators; (3) gain experience on various national scientific committees, which provided exposure to protocol development, study team structure and networking | Future Directions: (1) Cost–benefit analysis to determine whether increasing quantity and duration of support results in larger impact; (2) include other underrepresented populations (sexual and gender minorities, people with disabilities); (3) examine UMF at different career stages | |
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | Design: Descriptive, evaluation Purpose: Evaluate HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) that mentors early career investigators from underrepresented minority groups Methods: Describe program and conduct exit evaluations with alumni from cohorts 1, 2, and 3 (benefits of program 2–4 years after completing it) | Participants: 26 Research and Mentorship Program (RAMP) medical students who conducted either summer (2–4 months) or 9–12 month projects within the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN). | Barriers: (1) Programs shorter than 12 months—most felt a longer program would be beneficial; (2) isolation in home institutions; (3) failure to connect ESI and UMF with senior mentors | Facilitators: (1) % of mentee’s annual salary, funding for research supplies, travel paid; (2) mentors help complete projects, develop knowledge, skills and connections; (3) mentor and mentee matched; (4) regular interactions; (5) facilitate mentees contacting NIH institute leadership and collaborators | |
[87] Vishwanatha and Jones (2018) | Design: Descriptive, mixed methods Purpose: Report program design, curricula, outcomes in preparing UMF and community partners for careers in health disparity research Methods: 12 month program delivered remotely and F2F. Fellows attend workshops for skill development, and speak with mentor every two weeks | Participants: 71 total national fellows as of 2016 Results: 65% female, 48% Black, 20% Asian, 10% Hispanic, 39% from MSI. Increase in publications; over $6 million in funding (ave. per fellow = $90k; 93% rated the program as excellent or very good | Facilitators: (1) Participated in online activities; (2) received support from dean, chair, or supervisor; (3) “research readiness” of fellows assessed based on self-beliefs; (4) learned principles of research and health disparities; (5) focused on community-based participatory research (CBPR); (6) matched mentor and mentee | ||
[88] Zambrana et al. (2015) | Design: Qualitative Purpose: To highlight the importance of mentoring, reflect on when mentoring is absent, and examine ideal attributes of mentoring relationships, and challenges to effective mentoring Methods: Network sampling to identify participants; interviews and focus groups conducted drawing on a dual conceptual framework: intersectionality and social capital; Atlas.ti used for coding, analysis and interpretation | Participants: 58 UMF at 22 RI institutions Results: 38% from social sciences and 32% in STEM, health or medicine; most frequent activities: opps. for collaboration, coauthoring articles, invitations to present at conferences and an annual career review; 25% said poor mentoring hindered growth | Barriers: (1) Undervaluing faculty research areas and CBPR; (2) overcoming “imposter syndrome”; (3) patchwork of mentors (rather than systematic and intentional mentors); (4) supervisory rather than advisory interactions; (5) mentors with little familiarity or interest in their areas of research; (6) failure of a mentor to understand CBPR | Facilitators: (1) Mentors who understand struggles of UMF at predominantly white institutions; (2) support of research focus on marginalized populations; (3) mentor who will critique and edit work; (4) multiple mentors with different skills to serve different needs—with some located at different institutions to provide a “safe space” for discussions about the home institution | Limitations: (1) Small sample and possible selection and social desirability bias—study limited to those who volunteered; (2) cross-sectional design; (3) Native American scholars not included |
[Ref] Study Author(s) (Year) | Study Characteristics a | Bias and Discrimination (n = 5) | Isolation (n = 5) | Lack of Time (n = 5) | Find Work–Life Balance (n = 4) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[44] Beech et al. (2020) | D, QL, ESI, NI, UMF, MSI | x | |||
[45] Berget et al. (2010) | D, MM, ESI, NI, UMF, PA | x | x | ||
[52] Cross et al. (2019) | LR, NI, ESI | x | |||
[53] Cruz et al. (2020) | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[55] Duncan et al. (2016) | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | ||||
[57] Espino and Zambrana (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | |||
[58] Felder et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[60] Flores et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | ||
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | ||
[66] Mancusco et al. (2019) | QL, NI, ESI | x | |||
[69] Masterson et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | ||
[76] Snyder-Mackler (2015) | P, NI, ESI | x | |||
[77] Sorkness et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[81] Sweeney et al. (2017) | MM, D, NI, ESI | x | |||
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[88] Zambrana et al. (2015) | D, QL, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x |
[Ref.] Study Author(s) (Year) | Study Characteristics a | Lack of Mentors (n = 12) | Lack of Access to Resources (n = 9) | Heavy Teaching and Service Load (n = 7) | Bias (n = 6) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[44] Beech et al. (2020) | D, QL, ESI, NI, UMF, MSI | x | x | x | x |
[45] Berget et al. (2010) | D, MM, ESI, NI, UMF, PA | x | x | x | x |
[46] Brewer et al. (2016) | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | |
[48] Byington et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, RO | x | |||
[52] Cross et al. (2019) | LR, NI, ESI | x | |||
[55] Duncan et al. (2016) | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | |
[57] Espino and Zambrana (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | |||
[60] Flores et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | ||||
[63] Harawa et al. (2017) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[64] Hemming et al. (2019) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | |
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | ||
[67] Manson et al. (2016) | E, ESI | x | x | x | |
[69] Masterson et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI | x | |||
[76] Snyder-Mackler (2015) | P, NI, ESI | x | |||
[77] Sorkness et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | |
[79] Stoff (2019) | E, NI, ESI, UMF | ||||
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | |||
[88] Zambrana et al. (2015) | D, QL, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | x |
[Ref.] Study Author(s) (Year) | Study Characteristics a | Writing (n = 17) | Analytical Skills (n = 4) | Presentation Skills (n = 4) |
---|---|---|---|---|
[45] Berget et al. (2010) | D, MM, ESI, NI, UMF, PA | x | ||
[43] Blanchard et al. (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[47] Buist et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[48] Byington et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | |
[54] Doyle et al. (2019) | LR, NI, ESI | x | ||
[59] Feldman et al. (2010) | D, QT, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | |
[62] Flores et al. (2019) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[70] Milburn et al. (2019) | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | ||
[72] Pfund et al. (2016) | LR, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[73] Redmond (2020) | P, NI, ESI | x | ||
[74] Shea et al. (2011) | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | ||
[75] Shiramizu et al. (2016) | D, MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[78] Stamatakis et al. (2013) | D, QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[79] Stoff (2019) | E, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[83] Thorpe et al. (2020) | QT, UMF, RO | x | ||
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[87] Vishwanatha and Jones (2018) | D, MM, NI, ESI, UMF, MSI | x |
[Ref.] Study Author(s) (Year) | Study Characteristics a | Finding Productive Collaborators (n = 33) | Networking (n = 28) | Advocacy for Diversity and Cultural Humility (n = 12) | Managing Data, Projects and Teams (n = 7) | Organizational Dynamics and Navigating Political Traps (n = 6) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[44] Beech et al. (2020) | D, QL, ESI, NI, UMF, MSI | x | ||||
[45] Berget et al. (2010) | D, MM, ESI, NI, UMF, PA | x | ||||
[43] Blanchard et al. (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||||
[46] Brewer et al. (2016) | QL, UMF | x | x | |||
[47] Buist et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI | x | ||||
[48] Byington et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | x | ||
[51] Comeau et al. (2017) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[53] Cruz et al. (2020) | QL, NI, SI, UMF | x | ||||
[55] Duncan et al. (2016) | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[57] Espino and Zambrana (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | x | x | ||
[59] Feldman et al. (2010) | D, QT, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | |||
[60] Flores et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[62] Flores et al. (2019) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |
[63] Harawa et al. (2017) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[64] Hemming et al. (2019) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |
[66] Mancusco et al. (2019) | QL, NI, ESI | x | ||||
[68] Martina et al. (2014) | D, NI, ESI | x | x | |||
[69] Masterson et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |||
[70] Milburn et al. (2019) | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||
[71] Ofili et al. (2013) | D, NI, ESI, UMF, PA | x | x | x | ||
[72] Pfund et al. (2016) | LR, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[73] Redmond (2020) | P, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||
[74] Shea et al. (2011) | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | ||||
[75] Shiramizu et al. (2016) | D, MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[76] Snyder-Mackler (2015) | P, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||
[77] Sorkness et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[78] Stamatakis et al. (2013) | D, QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |||
[79] Stoff (2019) | E, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[80] Sutton et al. (2013) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||
[81] Sweeney et al. (2017) | MM, D, NI, ESI | x | ||||
[82] Teruya et al. (2013) | LR, NI, ESI | x | ||||
[84] Varkey et al. (2012) | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |||
[85] Velasquez et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||
[87] Vishwanatha and Jones (2018) | MM, D, NI, ESI, UMF, MSI | x | x | x | x | |
[88] Zambrana et al. (2015) | QL, D, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | x | x | x | x |
[Ref.] Study Author(s) (Year) | Study Characteristics a | Accountability (n = 17) | Career Planning (n = 14) | Leadership (n = 4) |
---|---|---|---|---|
[47] Buist et al. (2017) | D, NI, ESI | x | ||
[48] Byington et al. (2016) | D, NI, ESI, RO | x | ||
[54] Doyle et al. (2019) | LR, NI, ESI | x | ||
[56] Efstanthiou et al. (2018) | MM, NI, ESI | x | ||
[57] Espino and Zambrana (2019) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | ||
[59] Feldman et al. (2010) | D, QT, NI, ESI, RO | x | ||
[61] Flores et al. (2020) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[62] Flores et al. (2019) | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[63] Harawa et al. (2017) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[65] Jean-Louis et al. (2016) | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[66] Mancusco et al. (2019) | QL, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[67] Manson (2016) | E, ESI | x | ||
[68] Martina et al. (2014) | D, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[69] Masterson et al. (2019) | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[72] Pfund et al. (2016) | LR, NI, ESI, UMF | x | ||
[73] Redmond (2020) | P, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[74] Shea et al. (2011) | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | ||
[76] Snyder-Mackler (2015) | P, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[78] Stamatakis et al. (2013) | D, QT, NI, ESI | x | ||
[79] Stoff (2019) | E, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |
[84] Varkey et al. (2012) | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |
[86] Vermund et al. (2018) | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x |
[87] Vishwanatha and Jones (2018) | MM, D, NI, ESI, UMF, MSI | x | x |
[Ref.] | Study Characteristics a | Access to Expertise and Mentoring (n = 45) | Prof. Development Opportunities (n = 38) | Science Culture (n = 17) | Workload Assigned to Research (n = 16) | Culturally Responsive Institution and Mentoring Strategies (n = 16) | Funding, Equipment and Facilities (n = 14) | Pre-Assess Research Skills (n = 6) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[44] | D, QL, ESI, NI, UMF, MSI | x | x | x | x | x | ||
[45] | D, MM, ESI, NI, UMF, PA | x | x | |||||
[43] | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||||
[46] | QL, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[47] | D, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | x | ||
[48] | D, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | x | ||||
[49] | D, UMF, PA | x | x | |||||
[50] | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | |||
[51] | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[52] | LR, NI, ESI | x | x | |||||
[53] | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[54] | LR, NI, ESI | x | x | |||||
[55] | QL, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[56] | MM, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||||
[57] | MM, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | x | |||||
[58] | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||||
[59] | D, QT, NI, ESI, RO | x | x | |||||
[60] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[61] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[62] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[63] | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | |||||
[64] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | x | ||
[65] | MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[66] | QL, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||||
[67] | E, ESI | x | x | x | ||||
[68] | D, NI, ESI | x | x | x | ||||
[69] | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | |||||
[70] | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
[71] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[72] | LR, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[73] | P, NI, ESI | x | ||||||
[74] | D, MM, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | |||
[75] | D, MM, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[76] | P, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | |||
[77] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | ||||
[78] | D, QT, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | |||
[79] | E, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[80] | D, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | x | ||
[81] | MM, D, NI, ESI | x | ||||||
[82] | LR, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | |||
[84] | QT, NI, ESI | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
[85] | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | x | ||
[86] | QT, NI, ESI, UMF | x | x | x | x | |||
[87] | MM, D, NI, ESI, UMF, MSI | x | x | x | x | |||
[88] | QL, D, NI, ESI, UMF, RO | x | x | x | x |
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Ransdell, L.B.; Lane, T.S.; Schwartz, A.L.; Wayment, H.A.; Baldwin, J.A. Mentoring New and Early-Stage Investigators and Underrepresented Minority Faculty for Research Success in Health-Related Fields: An Integrative Literature Review (2010–2020). Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 432. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020432
Ransdell LB, Lane TS, Schwartz AL, Wayment HA, Baldwin JA. Mentoring New and Early-Stage Investigators and Underrepresented Minority Faculty for Research Success in Health-Related Fields: An Integrative Literature Review (2010–2020). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):432. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020432
Chicago/Turabian StyleRansdell, Lynda B., Taylor S. Lane, Anna L. Schwartz, Heidi A. Wayment, and Julie A. Baldwin. 2021. "Mentoring New and Early-Stage Investigators and Underrepresented Minority Faculty for Research Success in Health-Related Fields: An Integrative Literature Review (2010–2020)" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 432. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020432