Research
As is expected of all residents in ACGME-accredited Obstetrics & Gynecology Residency Programs, our residents must complete a required scholarly project. Most residents complete this requirement by self-initiating and/or participating in an existing research project with faculty mentorship and biostatistical/analytic support. These projects are mentored by faculty members with appropriate subject matter expertise and guided by our research curriculum which includes the following:
PGY1-4:
- Protected educational sessions regarding research fundamentals including study design and basic statistics scheduled during CORE sessions and some in conjunction with faculty POWERS hours
- Journal Clubs with articles derived from most current green & gray journals - discussions guided by faculty to assist in application of study design methodologies, pros/cons of certain approaches, subtleties of statistical analyses, recognition of biases and limitations, clinical practice application and quality/safety initiative discussions to assure our practices are aligned with national standards
- Regular meetings with mentor, research division director, analyst and/or study coordinator(s) regarding project progress and needs
- Attendance at ‘office hours’ with Kathy Leung (biostatistician)
PGY1:
- Completion of a Human Subjects Exam (‘CITI’ Test) valid for three years
PGY2:
- Commitment to project and mentor in the summer/early fall
- Written project draft, timeline, and PowerPoint presentation to peers and faculty for feedback prior to study start in the fall
- Application for departmental funding if needed in the fall
- Meeting with departmental biostatistician regarding database generation and/or anticipated analytic needs (fall)
- Submission of IRB in the fall/early winter (at the latest)
PGY3:
- Updated project write-up, timeline, and PowerPoint presentation to peers and faculty for feedback regarding study progression and unanticipated issues in the fall
- Meetings with departmental biostatistician regarding data cleaning, planned results, shelling of tables and general analytic needs (regular meetings)
- Abstract submission and PowerPoint presentation creation for presentation at Resident Research Day in the spring
- Oral presentation at Resident Research Day to peers, colleagues, supervisory faculty and honored guest speaker
PGY4:
- Renewal of a Human Subjects Exam (‘CITI’ Test)
- Submission of project abstract for conference consideration
- Submission of full manuscript (green journal style unless another journal is more appropriate)
- Consideration if project could/should alter patient care and assistance in implementation of such change