A Public Health of Consequence: Shifting the Cultural Narrative From Churning Grants to a Scholarship of Consequence.

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ID: 48462
2019
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Abstract
A confluence of challenges is impeding faculty members' ability to prioritize research with the goal of achieving a public health of consequence: research designed to improve conditions to produce a healthier society. Together, these challenges create a "churn" culture in which faculty focus on generating new business (i.e., grant funding and associated incentives) to replace lost revenue (i.e., expiring grants); this culture can relegate public health impact to a back seat.We share three strategies and related insights from our efforts to shift our department's cultural narrative from churn to a "scholarship of consequence": crafting research proposals of consequence, fostering thought leadership through collaborative writing, and mentoring faculty with a view to a scholarship of consequence.We describe each of the strategies and interim progress. Although they are a work in progress, we conclude that despite initial concerns, our evaluation metrics indicate improvement. (. Published online ahead of print September 19, 2019: e1-e4. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2019.305266).
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mcbride2019aamerican Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors McBride, Colleen M;Comeau, Dawn L;Mastin, Ashley E;Cooper, Hannah L F;
Journal American journal of public health
Year 2019
DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2019.305266
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