TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating the US biomedical workforce: Gender, field of training, and retention.
AU - Winkler, Anne E
AU - Levin, Sharon G
AU - Allison, Michael T
N1 - Abstract. The biomedical research workforce plays a crucial role in fostering economic growth and improving public health through discoveries and innovations.
PY - 2019/8/13
Y1 - 2019/8/13
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - biomedical workforce
KW - gender
KW - stem workforce
UR - https://academic.oup.com/spp/article-abstract/46/6/913/5549136
U2 - 10.1093/SCIPOL/SCZ039
DO - 10.1093/SCIPOL/SCZ039
M3 - Article
VL - 46
JO - Science and Public Policy
JF - Science and Public Policy
ER -