AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how a shared institutional research database affects medical students' research involvement, confidence, and satisfaction levels.
  • An inventory database was made using Google Sheets to list mentors and research projects, with students surveyed before and after access to this resource.
  • Results showed significant increases in students' presentations and publications, as well as improved confidence in their research capabilities and mentor relationships, with over 65% of participants supportive of expanding the database to other specialties.

Article Abstract

Introduction: We aimed to assess the effect of a shared institutional research database on medical students' scholarly work, perceived research competency, and self-reported satisfaction.

Methods: An institutional inventory database was created on Google Sheets with a listing of available mentors and a description of their ongoing research projects. The inventory database was shared with interested students and faculty. Students who agreed to participate were surveyed pre- and post-inventory. Survey questions assessed student demographics, prior research experience, and their perception of research competency and satisfaction. The number of presentations, publications, and articles pre- and post-inventory were also abstracted. Survey responses were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test.

Results: A total of 20 students were surveyed pre-inventory and at a median followup of six months (5-7) post-inventory. There was a significant increase in scholarly presentations and publications post-inventory (p<0.05 for all). Furthermore, post-inventory, students reported feeling more confident in establishing an academic career, finding good mentors, managing their relationship with their mentor, managing professional challenges, and effectively showcasing themselves professionally and describing their research (p<0.05 for all). More than 65% of students agreed or strongly agreed that the database was easy to use, accessible, transparent, and would like a similar database created for other specialty departments.

Conclusions: After performing mentorship-guided research through an institutional research database, medical students felt more confident in their ability to perform research and produced more scholarly work. Therefore, we recommend a research database be created across all institutional departments to foster interest in conducting research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10766337PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5489/cuaj.8468DOI Listing

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