Fostering the Next Generation of Researchers: a Sustainable Mentoring Program for Early Career Toxicologists in Scientific Abstract Review.

Mark B Mycyk, Christine M Murphy, Michael Chary, Peter R Chai, Adrienne Dunavin, Alison Meyn, Maryann Mazer-Amirshahi
Author Information
  1. Mark B Mycyk: Department of Emergency Medicine, Cook County Health, 1950 West Polk, 7thFloor, Chicago, IL, 60612, USA. mmycyk@cookcountyhhs.org. ORCID
  2. Christine M Murphy: Department of Emergency Medicine, Atrium Health's Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC, USA.
  3. Michael Chary: Department of Emergency Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
  4. Peter R Chai: Division of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
  5. Adrienne Dunavin: American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT), Phoenix, AZ, USA.
  6. Alison Meyn: American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT), Phoenix, AZ, USA.
  7. Maryann Mazer-Amirshahi: Department of Emergency Medicine, Medstar Washington Hospital, 110 Irving St NW, Washington, DC, USA.

Abstract

The presentation of abstracts at scientific meetings is an important step in the dissemination of scientific discovery. Most scientific meetings recruit volunteer experts to evaluate and score submitted abstracts to determine which ones qualify for presentation. Reviewing an abstract is an important service to one's specialty, but there is typically no formal training or required instruction during medical toxicology fellowship on scientific abstract scoring. In order to provide structured training in abstract review, the American College of Medical Toxicology (ACMT) Research Committee launched the Annual Scientific Meeting (ASM) Abstract Review Mentor program in 2021. The goals of this program were to train fellows how to score scientific abstracts and provide them with new mentor connections to toxicologists outside of their training program. After evaluating 3 years of data from participating fellows-in-training and faculty mentors, we conclude that ACMT's Abstract Review Mentor program was successful in training future reviewers and fostering external mentorship relationships. All participants reported their experience in this program will change how they submit future abstracts to scientific meetings, help their future service as an abstract reviewer, and motivate their involvement in other specialty-related research activities. Implementing an abstract review training program is sustainable and a vital strategy for enhancing the dissemination of scientific discovery and training the next generation of medical toxicology researchers.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Humans
United States
Mentors
Mentoring
Biomedical Research
Research Personnel
Health Personnel

Word Cloud

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