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Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards

BACKGROUND: Though women increasingly make up the majority of medical-school and other science graduates, they remain a minority in academic biomedical settings, where they are less likely to hold leadership positions or be awarded research funding. A major factor is the career breaks that women dis...

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Autores principales: Huttner, Angela, Bricheux, Alice, Dijk, Carianne J.M. Buurmeijer-van, Harvey, Matthew, Holmes, Alison, Lassmann, Britta, Lavergne, Valéry, Mailles, Alexandra, Mendelson, Marc, Muller, Nicolas, Sanguinetti, Maurizio, Sears, Cynthia, Skevaki, Chrysanthi, Syed, Uzma, Thomas, Salandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9196972/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33609786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2021.01.029
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author Huttner, Angela
Bricheux, Alice
Dijk, Carianne J.M. Buurmeijer-van
Harvey, Matthew
Holmes, Alison
Lassmann, Britta
Lavergne, Valéry
Mailles, Alexandra
Mendelson, Marc
Muller, Nicolas
Sanguinetti, Maurizio
Sears, Cynthia
Skevaki, Chrysanthi
Syed, Uzma
Thomas, Salandra
author_facet Huttner, Angela
Bricheux, Alice
Dijk, Carianne J.M. Buurmeijer-van
Harvey, Matthew
Holmes, Alison
Lassmann, Britta
Lavergne, Valéry
Mailles, Alexandra
Mendelson, Marc
Muller, Nicolas
Sanguinetti, Maurizio
Sears, Cynthia
Skevaki, Chrysanthi
Syed, Uzma
Thomas, Salandra
author_sort Huttner, Angela
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Though women increasingly make up the majority of medical-school and other science graduates, they remain a minority in academic biomedical settings, where they are less likely to hold leadership positions or be awarded research funding. A major factor is the career breaks that women disproportionately take to see to familial duties. They experience a related, but overlooked, hurdle upon their return: they are often too old to be eligible for ‘early-career researcher’ grants and ‘career-development’ awards, which are stepping stones to leadership positions in many institutions and which determine the demographics of their hierarchies for decades to come. Though age limits are imposed to protect young applicants from more experienced seniors, they have an unintended side effect of excluding returning workers, still disproportionately women, from the running. METHODS: In this joint effort by the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, the Federation of European Microbiological Societies, the Infectious Disease Society of America, the International Society for Infectious Diseases and the Swiss Society for Infectious Diseases, we invited all European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases-affiliated medical societies and funding bodies to participate in a survey on current ‘early-career’ application restrictions and measures taken to provide protections for career breaks. RECOMMENDATIONS: The following simple consensus recommendations are geared to funding bodies, academic societies and other organizations for the fair handling of eligibility for early-career awards: 1. Apply a professional, not physiological, age limit to applicants. 2. State clearly in the award announcement that career breaks will be factored into applicants’ evaluations such that: Time absent is time extended: for every full-time equivalent of career break taken, the same full-time equivalent will be extended to the professional age limit. Opportunity costs will also be taken into account: people who take career breaks risk additional opportunity costs, with work that they did before the career break often being forgotten or poorly documented, particularly in bibliometric accounting. Although there is no standardized metric to measure additional opportunity costs, organizations should (a) keep in mind their existence when judging applicants’ submissions, and (b) note clearly in the award announcement that opportunity costs of career breaks are also taken into account. 3. State clearly that further considerations can be undertaken, using more individualized criteria that are specific to the applicant population and the award in question. The working group welcomes feedback so that these recommendations can be improved and updated as needed.
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spelling pubmed-91969722022-08-18 Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards Huttner, Angela Bricheux, Alice Dijk, Carianne J.M. Buurmeijer-van Harvey, Matthew Holmes, Alison Lassmann, Britta Lavergne, Valéry Mailles, Alexandra Mendelson, Marc Muller, Nicolas Sanguinetti, Maurizio Sears, Cynthia Skevaki, Chrysanthi Syed, Uzma Thomas, Salandra Clin Microbiol Infect Article BACKGROUND: Though women increasingly make up the majority of medical-school and other science graduates, they remain a minority in academic biomedical settings, where they are less likely to hold leadership positions or be awarded research funding. A major factor is the career breaks that women disproportionately take to see to familial duties. They experience a related, but overlooked, hurdle upon their return: they are often too old to be eligible for ‘early-career researcher’ grants and ‘career-development’ awards, which are stepping stones to leadership positions in many institutions and which determine the demographics of their hierarchies for decades to come. Though age limits are imposed to protect young applicants from more experienced seniors, they have an unintended side effect of excluding returning workers, still disproportionately women, from the running. METHODS: In this joint effort by the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, the Federation of European Microbiological Societies, the Infectious Disease Society of America, the International Society for Infectious Diseases and the Swiss Society for Infectious Diseases, we invited all European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases-affiliated medical societies and funding bodies to participate in a survey on current ‘early-career’ application restrictions and measures taken to provide protections for career breaks. RECOMMENDATIONS: The following simple consensus recommendations are geared to funding bodies, academic societies and other organizations for the fair handling of eligibility for early-career awards: 1. Apply a professional, not physiological, age limit to applicants. 2. State clearly in the award announcement that career breaks will be factored into applicants’ evaluations such that: Time absent is time extended: for every full-time equivalent of career break taken, the same full-time equivalent will be extended to the professional age limit. Opportunity costs will also be taken into account: people who take career breaks risk additional opportunity costs, with work that they did before the career break often being forgotten or poorly documented, particularly in bibliometric accounting. Although there is no standardized metric to measure additional opportunity costs, organizations should (a) keep in mind their existence when judging applicants’ submissions, and (b) note clearly in the award announcement that opportunity costs of career breaks are also taken into account. 3. State clearly that further considerations can be undertaken, using more individualized criteria that are specific to the applicant population and the award in question. The working group welcomes feedback so that these recommendations can be improved and updated as needed. 2021-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9196972/ /pubmed/33609786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2021.01.029 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Article
Huttner, Angela
Bricheux, Alice
Dijk, Carianne J.M. Buurmeijer-van
Harvey, Matthew
Holmes, Alison
Lassmann, Britta
Lavergne, Valéry
Mailles, Alexandra
Mendelson, Marc
Muller, Nicolas
Sanguinetti, Maurizio
Sears, Cynthia
Skevaki, Chrysanthi
Syed, Uzma
Thomas, Salandra
Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title_full Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title_fullStr Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title_full_unstemmed Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title_short Joint ESCMID, FEMS, IDSA, ISID and SSI position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
title_sort joint escmid, fems, idsa, isid and ssi position paper on the fair handling of career breaks among physicians and scientists when assessing eligibility for early-career awards
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9196972/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33609786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmi.2021.01.029
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