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Medical School Regulatory Compliance Burdens for the Physician-Scientist.

S Thomas Carmichael
Published in: Annals of neurology (2024)
Medical school research faculty is increasingly required to complete more comprehensive and time consuming compliance steps for regulatory oversight. These relate to animal studies, information technology, biosafety, and human resources. For physician-scientists, the additional role in clinical care adds to these research areas with regulatory compliance in patient care and ever-growing web trainings. The sum of all these compliance regimes is a considerable time and cost burden, diminished research performance, and disengagement of faculty from colleagues, collaborations, and institutions. Many research and clinical compliance processes were put in place, often using legacy systems, in well-meaning attempts to address straightforward regulations in humane animal care, safe use of biological agents, and medical care delivery. However, their accumulation and negative impact on faculty performance demand time, energy, and resources that impact academic productivity. There are solutions to a relentlessly increasing regulatory load for research faculty, which involve vertical integration, convergence, and performance assessment in medical school and health system compliance regimes. ANN NEUROL 2024;96:417-422.
Keyphrases
  • medical students
  • transcription factor
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • palliative care
  • emergency department
  • endothelial cells
  • medical education
  • chronic pain
  • risk factors
  • health information
  • affordable care act