Academic versus Clinical Productivity of Cardiac Surgeons in the State of New York: Who Publishes More and Who Operates More

Author:

Rosati Carlo Maria1,Gaudino Mario2,Vardas Panos N.1,Weber Daniel J.1,Blitzer David1,Hameedi Fawad2,Koniaris Leonidas G.1,Girardi Leonard N.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana

2. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York

Abstract

We investigated whether/how cardiac surgeons can be productive both academically and clinically. Using online resources (New York State Adult Cardiac Surgery database, SCOPUS), we collected individual clinical volumes (operations performed/year), academic metrics (ongoing publications, role as author), practice setting, and seniority for all cardiac surgeons in the State of New York from 1994 to 2011. Over time, individual clinical volumes decreased (median operations/year: 193 in 1995 vs 126 in 2010; P < 0.001), whereas academic productivity remained unchanged (median publications/year: 0.7 vs 0.3; P = 0.55). There was no correlation (Spearman's correlation coefficient: -0.061; P = 0.08) between the number of new publications and operations/year for the whole population. More operations/year (median: 155 vs 144; P = 0.03) were performed by surgeons without versus with publications during that same year. Who published more worked at hospitals with higher clinical volumes (Spearman's correlation coefficient: 0.16; P < 0.001) and was more likely affiliated with thoracic surgery fellowship programs (median publications/year: 1.7 for affiliated vs 0 for nonaffiliated surgeons; P < 0.001). Cardiac surgeons could be classified into four categories: ∼40 per cent clinically busy, but not publishing at all; ∼45 per cent operating less, but publishing a little; ∼15 per cent clinically very productive (operating as much as the non-publishers) and publishing a lot; and ∼1 per cent operating the least, but publishing the most.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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