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Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators

BACKGROUND: Perhaps, as never before, we need innovators. With our growing population numbers, and with increasing pressures on our education systems, are we in danger of becoming more rigid and formulaic and increasingly inhibiting innovation? When young can we predict who will become the great inn...

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Autores principales: Jenkins, D J A, Jayalath, V H, Choo, V L, Viguiliouk, E, Kendall, C W C, Srichaikul, K, Mirrahimi, A, Bernstein, C N, Chang, T M, Gold, P, Haynes, R B, Hollenberg, M D, Lozano, A M, Posner, B I, Ronald, A R, Vranic, M, Wang, Y T, Chiavaroli, L, de Souza, R J, Nishi, S, Pichika, S C, Gillett, C, Tsirakis, T, Sievenpiper, J L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8497073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32589722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcaa210
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author Jenkins, D J A
Jayalath, V H
Choo, V L
Viguiliouk, E
Kendall, C W C
Srichaikul, K
Mirrahimi, A
Bernstein, C N
Chang, T M
Gold, P
Haynes, R B
Hollenberg, M D
Lozano, A M
Posner, B I
Ronald, A R
Vranic, M
Wang, Y T
Chiavaroli, L
de Souza, R J
Nishi, S
Pichika, S C
Gillett, C
Tsirakis, T
Sievenpiper, J L
author_facet Jenkins, D J A
Jayalath, V H
Choo, V L
Viguiliouk, E
Kendall, C W C
Srichaikul, K
Mirrahimi, A
Bernstein, C N
Chang, T M
Gold, P
Haynes, R B
Hollenberg, M D
Lozano, A M
Posner, B I
Ronald, A R
Vranic, M
Wang, Y T
Chiavaroli, L
de Souza, R J
Nishi, S
Pichika, S C
Gillett, C
Tsirakis, T
Sievenpiper, J L
author_sort Jenkins, D J A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Perhaps, as never before, we need innovators. With our growing population numbers, and with increasing pressures on our education systems, are we in danger of becoming more rigid and formulaic and increasingly inhibiting innovation? When young can we predict who will become the great innovators? For example, in medicine, who will change clinical practice? AIMS: We therefore determined to assess whether the current academic excellence approach to medical school entrance would have captured previous great innovators in medicine, assuming that they should all have well fulfilled current entrance requirements. METHODS: The authors assembled a list of 100 great medical innovators which was then approved, rejected or added to by a jury of 12 MD fellows of the Royal Society of Canada. Two reviewers, who had taken both the past and present Medical College Admission Test as part of North American medical school entrance requirements, independently assessed each innovator’s early life educational history in order to predict the innovator’s likely success at medical school entry, assuming excellence in all entrance requirements. RESULTS: Thirty-one percent of the great medical innovators possessed no medical degree and 24% would likely be denied entry to medical school by today’s standards (e.g. had a history of poor performance, failure, dropout or expulsion) with only 24% being guaranteed entry. Even if excellence in only one topic was required, the figure would only rise to 41% certain of medical school entry. CONCLUSION: These data show that today’s medical school entry standards would have barred many great innovators and raise questions about whether we are losing medical innovators as a consequence. Our findings have important implications for promoting flexibility and innovation for medical education, and for promoting an environment for innovation in general.
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spelling pubmed-84970732021-10-08 Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators Jenkins, D J A Jayalath, V H Choo, V L Viguiliouk, E Kendall, C W C Srichaikul, K Mirrahimi, A Bernstein, C N Chang, T M Gold, P Haynes, R B Hollenberg, M D Lozano, A M Posner, B I Ronald, A R Vranic, M Wang, Y T Chiavaroli, L de Souza, R J Nishi, S Pichika, S C Gillett, C Tsirakis, T Sievenpiper, J L QJM Original Papers BACKGROUND: Perhaps, as never before, we need innovators. With our growing population numbers, and with increasing pressures on our education systems, are we in danger of becoming more rigid and formulaic and increasingly inhibiting innovation? When young can we predict who will become the great innovators? For example, in medicine, who will change clinical practice? AIMS: We therefore determined to assess whether the current academic excellence approach to medical school entrance would have captured previous great innovators in medicine, assuming that they should all have well fulfilled current entrance requirements. METHODS: The authors assembled a list of 100 great medical innovators which was then approved, rejected or added to by a jury of 12 MD fellows of the Royal Society of Canada. Two reviewers, who had taken both the past and present Medical College Admission Test as part of North American medical school entrance requirements, independently assessed each innovator’s early life educational history in order to predict the innovator’s likely success at medical school entry, assuming excellence in all entrance requirements. RESULTS: Thirty-one percent of the great medical innovators possessed no medical degree and 24% would likely be denied entry to medical school by today’s standards (e.g. had a history of poor performance, failure, dropout or expulsion) with only 24% being guaranteed entry. Even if excellence in only one topic was required, the figure would only rise to 41% certain of medical school entry. CONCLUSION: These data show that today’s medical school entry standards would have barred many great innovators and raise questions about whether we are losing medical innovators as a consequence. Our findings have important implications for promoting flexibility and innovation for medical education, and for promoting an environment for innovation in general. Oxford University Press 2020-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8497073/ /pubmed/32589722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcaa210 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Physicians. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Papers
Jenkins, D J A
Jayalath, V H
Choo, V L
Viguiliouk, E
Kendall, C W C
Srichaikul, K
Mirrahimi, A
Bernstein, C N
Chang, T M
Gold, P
Haynes, R B
Hollenberg, M D
Lozano, A M
Posner, B I
Ronald, A R
Vranic, M
Wang, Y T
Chiavaroli, L
de Souza, R J
Nishi, S
Pichika, S C
Gillett, C
Tsirakis, T
Sievenpiper, J L
Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title_full Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title_fullStr Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title_full_unstemmed Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title_short Does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? An assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
title_sort does conventional early life academic excellence predict later life scientific discovery? an assessment of the lives of great medical innovators
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8497073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32589722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcaa210
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