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      Investigating the US biomedical workforce: Gender, field of training, and retention

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          Abstract

          The biomedical research workforce plays a crucial role in fostering economic growth and improving public health through discoveries and innovations. This study fills a knowledge gap by providing a comprehensive portrait of this workforce and retention within it. A distinguishing feature is that we use an occupation-based definition which allows us to look ‘backward’ to field of training and assess the extent to which it has grown more interdisciplinary, and how this differs by gender. The analysis is conducted using restricted-use SESTAT data, the most comprehensive dataset on the scientific workforce in the USA, for the years 1993, 2003, and 2010. Among the findings, we identify differences in interdisciplinarity in training by gender, and these differences have widened. In the retention analysis, which focuses on the 7-year period, 2003–10, we find that retention is negatively and significantly associated with interdisciplinary training for women, but not for men.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          Sci Public Policy
          Sci Public Policy
          spp
          Science & Public Policy
          Oxford University Press
          0302-3427
          1471-5430
          December 2019
          13 August 2019
          13 August 2020
          : 46
          : 6
          : 913-926
          Affiliations
          Department of Economics, University of Missouri-St Louis , St Louis, MO, USA
          Author notes
          Corresponding author. Email: awinkler@ 123456umsl.edu

          Sharon G. Levin passed away on 21 August 2017. She was the original PI on the National Institutes of Health grant that funded this research.

          Article
          PMC6922008 PMC6922008 6922008 scz039
          10.1093/scipol/scz039
          6922008
          31885414
          4ce1a805-2775-4f9f-9664-548eab2d2426
          © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com

          This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model ( https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model)

          History
          Page count
          Pages: 14
          Funding
          Funded by: National Institutes of Health 10.13039/100000002
          Award ID: U01-GM-112599-02
          Funded by: National Institutes of Health 10.13039/100000002
          Categories
          Main Articles

          stem workforce,biomedical workforce,gender
          stem workforce, biomedical workforce, gender

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