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Title: Face-to-Face: Educating Our Colleagues
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MaryBanach - 16 Nov 2011 - 14:50
We might want to share small film clips of our work at the Face-to-Face Meeting and upload them to CTSpedia. I worked with Rogers Hall, when he was at Berkeley, taping professional education workshops for HIV clinicians. We would present small snippets (2 or 3 minutes) of Mark Holodniy\x92s workshops at professional meetings, then talk for 4-5 minutes about our tape, and finally open the floor to discussion. Rogers is now at Vanderbilt. I know that the has filmed some of Frank and Dan Bryne\x92s work. A workshop with Vanderbilt\x92s Studio, Laurel Beckett\x92s Tuesday workshops, Peter Bacchetti\x92s work with biostatistics consultants. etc could provide a nice forum to discuss what works well and not so well in our consultations. Using your university\x92s filming equipment and uploading it to You Tube or sending it to me, we could put together a nice presentation.
Bill Brown was like a cross between Mr. Rogers and Perry Mason. He would
ask these penetrating questions, and suddenly the whole problem would
unfold before one's eyes, just like the climactic courtroom scenes. But
his demeanor was gentle and kind, and everyone from the most timid young
fellow to the most arrogant endowed professor regarded him with a kind of
loving awe.
We have a weekly drop-in workshop for biostatistics help. It would be
presumptuous to say I try to model myself on Bill, who was my advisor and
mentor, but perhaps it's safe to say we compare ourselves to the guys on
"Car Talk" on NPR. We diagnose problems, help folks to understand, and
send them along to the shop for the actual repairs. We have quite a strong
following now amongst the mouse-and-rat folks, and a branch office out at
the primate center and center for comparative medicine. As Frank notes,
the graduate students and post docs are especially keen to learn more, and
quite a few of them have become interested in R and taken or audited a
stat course (not typically required for their basic science doctoral
programs for some weird reason.) They are also quite happy to learn about
better experimental design, because they are always short of funds,
resources, and time.
Sometimes the reviews of grants and papers give helpful feedback on the
need for better deasign and analysis, but other times you just have to
shake your head in wonder. We helped one grad student with analysis of a
study with multiple sequential measurements in a sort of crossover study.
She submitted paper and got a review that said, in effect, "I don't know
why you did this repeated measures analysis, that is wrong, you should
just calculate all the means and report them." Huh?? Then there was the
one that said that log transformation was sort of Satan's spawn, hiding
interactions, and that logs had nothing to do with multiplicative
relationships. Clearly there is an ongoing need for remedial education out
there.
Laurel
Judith Goldberg - 9 Nov 2011
I have been following this conversation with great interest. We have found that the best motivator for any basic/translational scientist to work with us is a failed grant application and/or manuscript rejection. Some of these scientists have become important long term collaborators and have learned from their failures. Our efforts to provide guidance and input into grant resubmissions and manuscript revisions have resulted in valued long term collaborations.
Judy
Great strategy, and one that I fully endorse. It is a slow culture change though and, as you state, relies on resources being made available. We are having some successes here, and I am ever more frequently asked how successful clinical research departments got that way, and what biostats had to do with it. That is now being followed with fiscal (and other) resources and requests for help. I am curious how you handle the situation with the more senior PIs; who are adamant they need no help, particularly those in the more basic science focused departments? I have found that the clinical research departments are very receptive, but the less removed from people the research becomes the less the investigators are willing to collaborate and the more they want a service.
Chris
Phlip Lavori - 8 Nov 2011
Chris - One positive step that has
worked for many of us at Stanford is to
volunteer as mentors for our faculty
colleagues and trainees in other Med
School departments. That involvement
tends to inoculate us against the worst
of the problems you and others have
discussed. Once physicians discover how
pleasant it is to explain their science
to an attentive, unbiased audience, they
don't wait until they have a specific
problem to solve. But the environment
(including fiscal arrangements) has to
be conducive to this involvement. That's
the job of leadership. We have to press
for supported time for our faculty and
senior staff to engage with their
clinical colleagues as mentors, rather
than relying on fee-for-service. The
name for people who provide 'service' is
'servant'.
phil
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09 May 2013, MaryBanach
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