National Institutes of Health addresses the science of diversity
The US biomedical research workforce does not currently mirror the nation’s population demographically, despite numerous attempts to increase diversity. This imbalance is limiting the promise of our biomedical enterprise for building knowledge and improving the nation’s health. Beyond ensuring fairn...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2015-10, Vol.112 (40), p.12240-12242 |
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creator | Valantine, Hannah A Francis S. Collins |
description | The US biomedical research workforce does not currently mirror the nation’s population demographically, despite numerous attempts to increase diversity. This imbalance is limiting the promise of our biomedical enterprise for building knowledge and improving the nation’s health. Beyond ensuring fairness in scientific workforce representation, recruiting and retaining a diverse set of minds and approaches is vital to harnessing the complete intellectual capital of the nation. The complexity inherent in diversifying the research workforce underscores the need for a rigorous scientific approach, consistent with the ways we address the challenges of science discovery and translation to human health. Herein, we identify four cross-cutting diversity challenges ripe for scientific exploration and opportunity: research evidence for diversity’s impact on the quality and outputs of science; evidence-based approaches to recruitment and training; individual and institutional barriers to workforce diversity; and a national strategy for eliminating barriers to career transition, with scientifically based approaches for scaling and dissemination. Evidence-based data for each of these challenges should provide an integrated, stepwise approach to programs that enhance diversity rapidly within the biomedical research workforce. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1073/pnas.1515612112 |
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subjects | Biomedical Research business enterprises Career Choice Careers Clinical Competence Cultural Diversity culture diversity human health Humans Intellectual capital labor force Mentors National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health (U.S.) PERSPECTIVE Research Personnel - statistics & numerical data scientific workforce Social Sciences underrepresentation in science United States Workforce Workplace diversity |
title | National Institutes of Health addresses the science of diversity |
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