TY - JOUR
T1 - Current state of educational compensation in academic neurology
T2 - Results of a US national survey
AU - Weber, Daniel
AU - Sarva, Harini
AU - Weaver, Joshua
AU - Wang, Fei
AU - Chou, Jingyuan
AU - Cornes, Susannah
AU - Nickels, Katherine
AU - Safdieh, Joseph E.
AU - Poncelet, Ann
AU - Stern, Barney J.
N1 - Funding Information:
D. Weber reports no disclosures relevant to the manuscript. H. Sarva has 5% support from the Michael J. Fox Foundation, is a principal investigators on clinical trials for Biogen and Intec Pharmaceuticals and coinvestigator on clinical trials for Insightec, and has received internal funding from Cornell. J. Weaver reports no disclosures relevant to the manuscript. F. Wang is supported by Michael J. Fox Foundation with grants 14858 and 15914. J. Chou, S. Cornes, and K. Nickels report no disclosures relevant to the manuscript. J. Safdieh receives an editorial stipend from the AAN and publishing royalties from Elsevier. A. Poncelet served briefly as a consultant (8 hours) for Corcept Therapeutics Inc in 2018. B. Stern serves as an associate editor for Neurology Today, an AAN publication. He receives compensation in the form of salary support for this activity. Dr. Stern also receives salary support from the NIH for his role as medical safety monitor for the Carotid Revascularization for Primary Prevention of Stroke (CREST2) clinical trial. Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures.
Publisher Copyright:
© American Academy of Neurology.
PY - 2019/7/2
Y1 - 2019/7/2
N2 - In the current medical climate, medical education is at risk of being de-emphasized, leading to less financial support and compensation for faculty. A rise in compensation plans that reward clinical or research productivity fails to incentivize and threatens to Erode the educational missions of our academic institutions. Aligning compensation with the all-encompassing mission of academic centers can lead to increased faculty well-being, clinical productivity, and scholarship. An anonymous survey developed by members of the A.B. Baker Section on Neurologic Education was sent to the 133 chairs of neurology to assess the type of compensation faculty receive for teaching efforts. Seventy responses were received, with 59 being from chairs. Key results include the following: 36% of departments offered direct compensation; 36% did not; residency program directors received the most salary support at 36.5% full-time equivalent; and administrative roles had greatest weight in determining academic compensation. We believe a more effective, transparent system of recording and rewarding faculty for their educational efforts would encourage faculty to teach, streamline promotions for clinical educators, and strengthen undergraduate and graduate education in neurology.
AB - In the current medical climate, medical education is at risk of being de-emphasized, leading to less financial support and compensation for faculty. A rise in compensation plans that reward clinical or research productivity fails to incentivize and threatens to Erode the educational missions of our academic institutions. Aligning compensation with the all-encompassing mission of academic centers can lead to increased faculty well-being, clinical productivity, and scholarship. An anonymous survey developed by members of the A.B. Baker Section on Neurologic Education was sent to the 133 chairs of neurology to assess the type of compensation faculty receive for teaching efforts. Seventy responses were received, with 59 being from chairs. Key results include the following: 36% of departments offered direct compensation; 36% did not; residency program directors received the most salary support at 36.5% full-time equivalent; and administrative roles had greatest weight in determining academic compensation. We believe a more effective, transparent system of recording and rewarding faculty for their educational efforts would encourage faculty to teach, streamline promotions for clinical educators, and strengthen undergraduate and graduate education in neurology.
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U2 - 10.1212/WNL.0000000000007664
DO - 10.1212/WNL.0000000000007664
M3 - Article
C2 - 31101740
AN - SCOPUS:85069266253
SN - 0028-3878
VL - 93
SP - 30
EP - 34
JO - Neurology
JF - Neurology
IS - 1
ER -