Career-Success Scale – A new instrument to assess young physicians' academic career steps

BackgroundWithin the framework of a prospective cohort study of Swiss medical school graduates, a Career-Success Scale (CSS) was constructed in a sample of young physicians choosing different career paths in medicine. Furthermore the influence of personality factors, the participants' personal situation, and career related factors on their career success was investigated.Methods406 residents were assessed in terms of career aspired to, and their career progress. The Career-Success Scale, consisting of 7 items, was developed and validated, addressing objective criteria of academic career advancement. The influence of gender and career aspiration was investigated by a two-factorial analysis of variance, the relationships between personality factors, personal situation, career related factors and the Career-Success Scale by a multivariate linear regression analysis.ResultsThe unidimensional Career-Success Scale has an internal consistency of 0.76. It is significantly correlated at the bivariate level with gender, instrumentality, and all career related factors, particularly with academic career and received mentoring. In multiple regression, only gender, academic career, surgery as chosen specialty, and received mentoring are significant predictors. The highest values were observed in participants aspiring to an academic career, followed by those pursuing a hospital career and those wanting to run a private practice. Independent of the career aspired to, female residents have lower scores than their male colleagues.ConclusionThe Career-Success Scale proved to be a short, reliable and valid instrument to measure career achievements. As mentoring is an independent predictor of career success, mentoring programs could be an important instrument to specifically enhance careers of female physicians in academia.

[1]  H. Humphrey,et al.  Mentoring in Academic Medicine , 2010 .

[2]  R. Levine,et al.  The three‐headed mentor: rethinking the classical construct , 2003, Medical education.

[3]  Lisa E. Bernstein,et al.  Repaving the Road to Academic Success: The IMeRGE Approach to Peer Mentoring , 2006, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[4]  Steven R Lowenstein,et al.  Bmc Medical Education Medical School Faculty Discontent: Prevalence and Predictors of Intent to Leave Academic Careers , 2007 .

[5]  Sharon E Straus,et al.  Mentoring in academic medicine: a systematic review. , 2006, JAMA.

[6]  L. Reichenbach,et al.  Gender and academic medicine: impacts on the health workforce , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[7]  L. Miedzinski,et al.  A Canadian faculty of medicine and dentistry’s survey of career development needs , 2001, Medical education.

[8]  T. Abel,et al.  Junior physicians' workplace experiences in clinical fields in German-speaking Switzerland. , 2005, Swiss medical weekly.

[9]  T. Abel,et al.  Swiss residents' speciality choices – impact of gender, personality traits, career motivation and life goals , 2006, BMC Health Services Research.

[10]  A. Abele Ziele, Selbstkonzept und Work-Life-Balance bei der längerfristigen Lebensgestaltung. Befunde der Erlanger Längsschnittstudie BELA-E mit Akademikerinnen und Akademikern , 2005 .

[11]  G. Blickle,et al.  Laufbahnförderung durch ein Unterstützungsnetzwerk , 2003 .

[12]  V. Reed,et al.  Career obstacles for women in medicine: an overview , 2001, Medical education.

[13]  J. Bickel,et al.  Why Aren't There More Women Leaders in Academic Medicine? The Views of Clinical Department Chairs , 2001, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[14]  J. Beyene,et al.  Performance of a Career Development and Compensation Program at an Academic Health Science Center , 2007, Pediatrics.

[15]  T. Lambert,et al.  Views of doctors in training on the importance and availability of career advice in UK medicine , 2007, Medical education.

[16]  T. Abel,et al.  The influence of gender and personality traits on the career planning of Swiss medical students. , 2003, Swiss medical weekly.

[17]  Cooke,et al.  Education and training in the senior house officer grade: results from a cohort study of United Kingdom medical graduates , 1999, Medical education.

[18]  A. Nattinger,et al.  Promotion of women physicians in academic medicine. Glass ceiling or sticky floor? , 1995, JAMA.

[19]  Maria L. Kraimer,et al.  Proactive personality and career success. , 1999, The Journal of applied psychology.

[20]  D. A. Quistberg,et al.  Mentoring at the University of Pennsylvania: Results of a Faculty Survey , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[21]  D. Rintala,et al.  Gender Differences Regarding Career Issues and Promotion in Academic Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation , 2007, American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation.

[22]  B. Mukesh,et al.  Assessment of residents' loss of interest in academic careers and identification of correctable factors. , 2006, Archives of dermatology.

[23]  G. Moddeman,et al.  Unraveling the Mystery of Health , 1995 .

[24]  A. Antonovsky Unraveling the mystery of health: how people manage stress and stay well , 1987 .