BACKGROUND
Academic faculty who devote most of their time to clinical work often struggle to engage in meaningful scholarly work. They may be disadvantaged by limited research training and limited time. Simply providing senior mentors and biostatistical support has limited effectiveness.
OBJECTIVE
We aimed to increase productivity in scholarly work of hospitalists and internal medicine physicians by integrating an Academic Research Coach into a robust faculty development program.
DESIGN
This was a pre‐post quality improvement evaluation.
SETTING
This was conducted at the University of Washington in faculty across three academic‐affiliated hospitals and 10 academic‐affiliated clinics.
PARTICIPANTS
Participants were hospitalists and internists on faculty in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the University of Washington.
INTERVENTION
The coach was a 0.50 full time equivalent health services researcher with strong research methods, project implementation, and interpersonal skills. The coach consulted on research, quality improvement, and other scholarship.
MEASUREMENTS
We assessed the number of faculty supported, types of services provided, and numbers of grants, papers, and abstracts submitted and accepted.
RESULTS
The coach consulted with 49 general internal medicine faculty including 30 hospitalists who conducted 63 projects. The coach supported 13 publications, 11 abstracts, four grant submissions, and seven manuscript reviews. Forty‐eight faculty in other departments benefited as co‐authors.
CONCLUSION
Employing a dedicated health services researcher as part of a faculty development program is an effective way to engage clinically oriented faculty in meaningful scholarship. Key aspects of the program included an accessible and knowledgeable coach and an ongoing marketing strategy.