Training Underrepresented Early-Career Faculty in Cardiovascular Health Research during COVID-19: Structural Inequities and Health Disparity

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted race-based health disparities and structural racism in the United States. Enhancing the training of early-career academic and health scientists from underrepresented minority groups (URM) is critical to reduce disparities affecting underserved population groups....

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Veröffentlicht in:Ethnicity & disease 2021, Vol.31 (3), p.411-416
Hauptverfasser: Diallo, Ana F., Alabi, Olamide, Groves, Angela, Johnson, Amber E., Okoro, Florence, Ramos, S. Raquel, Nelson, Rochelle K., Boutjdir, Mohamed
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container_end_page 416
container_issue 3
container_start_page 411
container_title Ethnicity & disease
container_volume 31
creator Diallo, Ana F.
Alabi, Olamide
Groves, Angela
Johnson, Amber E.
Okoro, Florence
Ramos, S. Raquel
Nelson, Rochelle K.
Boutjdir, Mohamed
description The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted race-based health disparities and structural racism in the United States. Enhancing the training of early-career academic and health scientists from underrepresented minority groups (URM) is critical to reduce disparities affecting underserved population groups. A dedicated training program that has been proven to support URM can facilitate career development for junior faculty during the pandemic. This critical support ensures the retention of talented, racially diverse junior faculty who are poised to mitigate structural racism, rather than perpetuate it. We describe how the Cardiovascular Disease Programs to Increase Diversity Among Individuals Engaged in Health-Related Research (PRIDE-CVD) summer institute successfully transitioned from a face-to-face format to a virtual format during the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, early-career faculty continued to receive the PRIDE-CVD training on research methodology, grantsmanship, career development, and CVD health disparities, especially as related to the pandemic. In addition, the virtual format facilitated networking, promoted mental wellness, and allowed continual mentorship. Collectively, the program provided timely and relevant career development in the COVID-19 era and helped participants navigate the psychosocial challenges of being a URM in cardiovascular health research.
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source MEDLINE; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Biomedical Research
COVID-19
Faculty
Humans
Minority Groups
Original Report: COVID-19
Pandemics
SARS-CoV-2
United States
title Training Underrepresented Early-Career Faculty in Cardiovascular Health Research during COVID-19: Structural Inequities and Health Disparity
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