The pulmonary physician-scientist has a special niche to generate basic research findings and apply them to a clinical disease and perhaps impact its medical care. The availability of new high throughput-based scientific technologies in the "omics era" has made this an opportune time for physician scientists to prepare and embark on an academic career in respiratory disease research. However, maintaining an adequate flow through the research pipeline of physician-scientist investigators studying respiratory system diseases is currently a challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew technologies have made this an opportune time to prepare and embark on an academic career in respiratory disease research. The pulmonary physician-scientist has a special advantage to take basic research findings to the patient's illness and impact medical care. But is there a sufficient work force emerging to capitalize on current research opportunities? The aim of this study was to analyze the present workforce of potential clinical investigators available by reviewing the mechanisms of training support as provided by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and by the professional pulmonary societies, including their patient advocacy groups and pharmaceutical partners, and by discussing how support for research training might be improved for advanced clinical fellows.
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