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Nov. 1, 2023

Are publications really necessary?

Are publications really necessary?
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Clinician Researcher

Publish or perish? Are there really only two options? In this episode, we discuss the advantages of publishing in advancing your career development.Key Points Discussed:

  1. The benefits of publishing for personal knowledge growth.
  2. The value of engaging with the scientific community.
  3. The chance to strengthen writing and scientific communication skills.
  4. The value of developing your expertise.
  5. The fulfillment of mentoring the next generation of scientists.
Links and Resources Mentioned:
  • "The Power of Habit" by Charles Duhigg
  • American Society for Apheresis: An organization related to guidelines and fact sheets.
Call to Action: If you found this episode valuable, please consider leaving a five-star review to help others discover this podcast and its informative content.Sponsor/Advertising/Monetization Information:This episode is sponsored by Coag Coach LLC, a leading provider of coaching resources for clinicians transitioning to become research leaders. Coag Coach LLC is committed to supporting clinicians in their academic and research endeavors.
Transcript
1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,860 Welcome to the Clinician Researcher podcast, where academic clinicians learn the skills 2 00:00:05,860 --> 00:00:11,260 to build their own research program, whether or not they have a mentor. 3 00:00:11,260 --> 00:00:17,340 As clinicians, we spend a decade or more as trainees learning to take care of patients. 4 00:00:17,340 --> 00:00:22,380 When we finally start our careers, we want to build research programs, but then we find 5 00:00:22,380 --> 00:00:27,780 that our years of clinical training did not adequately prepare us to lead our research 6 00:00:27,780 --> 00:00:29,200 program. 7 00:00:29,200 --> 00:00:35,480 Through no fault of our own, we struggle to find mentors, and when we can't, we quit. 8 00:00:35,480 --> 00:00:40,580 However, clinicians hold the keys to the greatest research breakthroughs. 9 00:00:40,580 --> 00:00:46,200 For this reason, the Clinician Researcher podcast exists to give academic clinicians 10 00:00:46,200 --> 00:00:51,800 the tools to build their own research program, whether or not they have a mentor. 11 00:00:51,800 --> 00:01:01,040 Now introducing your host, Toyosi Onwuemene. 12 00:01:01,040 --> 00:01:04,560 Welcome to the Clinician Researcher podcast. 13 00:01:04,560 --> 00:01:08,560 I'm your host, Toyosi Onwuemene, and it is such a pleasure to be talking with you today. 14 00:01:08,560 --> 00:01:13,560 I want to thank you for tuning in, and I am talking today about publications. 15 00:01:13,560 --> 00:01:14,560 Are they even necessary? 16 00:01:14,560 --> 00:01:19,120 Do you really need publications in this academic career? 17 00:01:19,120 --> 00:01:22,560 What is this thing about publications? 18 00:01:22,560 --> 00:01:28,160 I want to talk about them because, you know, have you ever heard the phrase publish or 19 00:01:28,160 --> 00:01:29,160 perish? 20 00:01:29,160 --> 00:01:31,080 I don't know where that came from. 21 00:01:31,080 --> 00:01:35,880 I'm sure there's a great origin story, but already I hear it and I'm like, really, publish 22 00:01:35,880 --> 00:01:36,880 or perish? 23 00:01:36,880 --> 00:01:37,880 What does that even really mean? 24 00:01:37,880 --> 00:01:41,000 Are you really going to perish if you don't publish? 25 00:01:41,000 --> 00:01:48,560 Yes, it does allude to the fact that in academic environments, publications are so valued, 26 00:01:48,560 --> 00:01:52,560 and if you don't publish, then there's just the sense that you don't belong, and maybe 27 00:01:52,560 --> 00:01:55,200 you may not be promoted like you'd want to. 28 00:01:55,200 --> 00:02:01,560 So yeah, there are some consequences of not having publications, but do you die? 29 00:02:01,560 --> 00:02:02,560 No. 30 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:04,040 Your life continues. 31 00:02:04,040 --> 00:02:08,320 Anyway, so I'm just telling you that publish or perish is not real, but, you know, in not 32 00:02:08,320 --> 00:02:11,240 in the sense of the word of like actual perishing. 33 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:18,520 Anyway, I digress, but I think it's important to talk about publications because, wow, they're 34 00:02:18,520 --> 00:02:24,960 so much anxiety and dread and worry and fear that's around publications sometimes. 35 00:02:24,960 --> 00:02:30,120 And to be honest, there's so much anxiety and pressure over publications that people 36 00:02:30,120 --> 00:02:33,440 are making stuff up just to publish. 37 00:02:33,440 --> 00:02:36,680 And I want to talk about publications. 38 00:02:36,680 --> 00:02:41,920 I want to talk about it, not from the perspective of, oh my gosh, I'm going to advance my career 39 00:02:41,920 --> 00:02:48,160 and I'm going to be promoted or I'll be able to, you know, gain a higher salary because 40 00:02:48,160 --> 00:02:49,520 I have this new promotion. 41 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:52,280 I'm not going to talk about it from that perspective. 42 00:02:52,280 --> 00:02:57,640 I think enough people talk about publications from the perspective of currency, of academia, 43 00:02:57,640 --> 00:03:00,520 why it's needed for promotion and tenure. 44 00:03:00,520 --> 00:03:02,960 And I think all of that is great. 45 00:03:02,960 --> 00:03:04,720 It's just not very motivating. 46 00:03:04,720 --> 00:03:08,200 Like yeah, publish because if you don't publish, you can't be promoted. 47 00:03:08,200 --> 00:03:10,400 That just to me is not very motivating. 48 00:03:10,400 --> 00:03:12,760 It's like, who says I want to be promoted? 49 00:03:12,760 --> 00:03:18,120 I mean, you do, but it's like the connection between publication and promotion is so far 50 00:03:18,120 --> 00:03:22,720 you know, it's like, okay, how do you make the connection today? 51 00:03:22,720 --> 00:03:24,920 I mean, it's far, right? 52 00:03:24,920 --> 00:03:29,160 You start your faculty career job now and in six years you need to have published enough 53 00:03:29,160 --> 00:03:30,680 to be able to be promoted. 54 00:03:30,680 --> 00:03:33,280 Maybe it's seven years for some of you, eight, nine. 55 00:03:33,280 --> 00:03:37,800 You got to have published enough to be promoted, but what's going to sustain you today other 56 00:03:37,800 --> 00:03:38,800 than this stick? 57 00:03:38,800 --> 00:03:44,280 I mean, I'm sorry, this carrot on a stick in the far future that, you know, eventually 58 00:03:44,280 --> 00:03:46,360 you'll get there and maybe you'll be promoted. 59 00:03:46,360 --> 00:03:48,200 It sustains you today. 60 00:03:48,200 --> 00:03:52,120 What are the benefits of publication right this moment? 61 00:03:52,120 --> 00:03:56,720 And the reason it's important is because in order to succeed at any goal, you really do 62 00:03:56,720 --> 00:04:00,120 have to break it down into its small steps and enjoy the journey. 63 00:04:00,120 --> 00:04:01,680 You got to enjoy the journey. 64 00:04:01,680 --> 00:04:05,920 And if you don't enjoy the journey, wow, it's going to be really hard to sustain it over 65 00:04:05,920 --> 00:04:06,920 the long term. 66 00:04:06,920 --> 00:04:11,640 You might be able to do it at a frenzied pace for a month, two months, three months. 67 00:04:11,640 --> 00:04:17,880 Maybe you could get to 12 months, but you're not going to sustain a 30 to 40 year career, 68 00:04:17,880 --> 00:04:20,720 God helping you live long, long, long, right? 69 00:04:20,720 --> 00:04:22,280 God helping you live a long life. 70 00:04:22,280 --> 00:04:27,400 You're not going to sustain that kind of frenzied energy over a long career. 71 00:04:27,400 --> 00:04:31,260 And you know, honestly, some people are able to sustain the frenzied energy over a six 72 00:04:31,260 --> 00:04:32,260 year career. 73 00:04:32,260 --> 00:04:37,040 And then they get tenure and they're like, I'm done, no more publications. 74 00:04:37,040 --> 00:04:42,480 And that kind of is a sad thing because, you know, it's not about just promotion and tenure. 75 00:04:42,480 --> 00:04:44,600 Please people hear me. 76 00:04:44,600 --> 00:04:47,200 Publications are not just about getting promoted. 77 00:04:47,200 --> 00:04:52,720 And if you just are working, working, working to churn out publications just so you can 78 00:04:52,720 --> 00:04:57,120 get promoted, I would like you to consider whether you are in the right career, whether 79 00:04:57,120 --> 00:05:00,060 this is what you really want to be doing. 80 00:05:00,060 --> 00:05:08,200 Because your academic journey, your faculty journey is not about, you know, brownie points 81 00:05:08,200 --> 00:05:12,840 or stars or gold stars or rewards. 82 00:05:12,840 --> 00:05:17,780 It really is about building a career that is satisfying to you, that you're able to 83 00:05:17,780 --> 00:05:20,800 look back on and say, wow, this was the career I had. 84 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:23,520 Look at all the impact I made. 85 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:26,040 And publications are part of that impact. 86 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:32,520 But I do want to talk today about a couple of reasons why you should consider publishing. 87 00:05:32,520 --> 00:05:36,440 And I'm talking about reasons that benefit you today. 88 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:42,040 And I hope that if you are not kind of already working to get some of your ideas out and 89 00:05:42,040 --> 00:05:45,560 getting them published, I encourage you to definitely do that. 90 00:05:45,560 --> 00:05:49,920 Or if you are and you're discouraged and you're like, oh, I don't want to do this anywhere. 91 00:05:49,920 --> 00:05:50,920 This is too hard. 92 00:05:50,920 --> 00:05:55,280 I just want to encourage you again that it is really worth doing. 93 00:05:55,280 --> 00:06:00,680 And I want to give you five reasons to think about when it comes to publishing. 94 00:06:00,680 --> 00:06:04,240 The first thing is growth of your personal knowledge. 95 00:06:04,240 --> 00:06:07,400 And I will say that as physicians, we are full of knowledge, right? 96 00:06:07,400 --> 00:06:11,640 We went through medical school and the whole process of medical school was to pump your 97 00:06:11,640 --> 00:06:18,720 head full of knowledge, at least the first two years were. 98 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:22,640 And half of that time is spent pouring knowledge into your head. 99 00:06:22,640 --> 00:06:26,680 And the other half is spent mopping the knowledge off the floor and trying to get it back in 100 00:06:26,680 --> 00:06:30,480 your head because clearly it's not sticking. 101 00:06:30,480 --> 00:06:35,940 But when you're on the wards as a third and a fourth year, second year for some of you, 102 00:06:35,940 --> 00:06:43,020 you recognize that a lot of that information does stay because it's knowledge you need 103 00:06:43,020 --> 00:06:45,340 to advance patient care. 104 00:06:45,340 --> 00:06:51,640 But when you start to take care of patients, when you move in medical school from trying 105 00:06:51,640 --> 00:06:56,480 to memorize all these facts to actually caring for patients, the facts stick better in the 106 00:06:56,480 --> 00:06:59,680 context of actually taking care of the patient. 107 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:04,160 It's like, oh, the pathophysiology of renal failure makes sense because I've cared for 108 00:07:04,160 --> 00:07:05,840 a patient with renal failure. 109 00:07:05,840 --> 00:07:07,880 I've kind of seen it unfold. 110 00:07:07,880 --> 00:07:10,000 It's not just the thing in the textbook I've memorized. 111 00:07:10,000 --> 00:07:12,320 It's the patient experience that I had. 112 00:07:12,320 --> 00:07:17,960 You remember how that knowledge struck better when you had the experiential knowledge? 113 00:07:17,960 --> 00:07:18,960 Yes. 114 00:07:18,960 --> 00:07:23,080 And when you're writing a publication, writing manuscripts for publication is the same thing. 115 00:07:23,080 --> 00:07:29,320 It's that you have this knowledge, but when you actually have to go dig up references 116 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:35,000 and figure out how to put it together in a cogent way in a manuscript format and submit 117 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:39,160 it for publication, you really do grow in your personal knowledge. 118 00:07:39,160 --> 00:07:44,440 You become someone who has knowledge on this topic because you've written about it. 119 00:07:44,440 --> 00:07:45,560 And it's just so powerful. 120 00:07:45,560 --> 00:07:49,440 It's the reason why when people are looking for speakers, they go looking for people who've 121 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:53,000 published on things because it means these are people who are reading the literature 122 00:07:53,000 --> 00:07:56,440 and are well versed with what's going on with this topic. 123 00:07:56,440 --> 00:08:00,400 They have knowledge because they've had to write about the topic. 124 00:08:00,400 --> 00:08:02,800 And so writing about a topic does give you knowledge. 125 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:04,440 It helps you advance. 126 00:08:04,440 --> 00:08:05,640 And it's really awesome. 127 00:08:05,640 --> 00:08:09,760 I don't know about you, but you know, the first year of medical school was the most 128 00:08:09,760 --> 00:08:10,760 frustrating year. 129 00:08:10,760 --> 00:08:14,560 We were learning so much and it's like, what is the point of all this knowledge? 130 00:08:14,560 --> 00:08:17,480 And can my brain take any more? 131 00:08:17,480 --> 00:08:21,480 And then when I finally got to the words, it was like, oh my gosh, this is so awesome. 132 00:08:21,480 --> 00:08:24,320 I'm so glad I'm learning all the things I'm learning because of all the people I'm able 133 00:08:24,320 --> 00:08:25,320 to help. 134 00:08:25,320 --> 00:08:27,120 It is so incredible. 135 00:08:27,120 --> 00:08:32,240 It's that same personal satisfaction with knowledge that's actionable, with knowledge 136 00:08:32,240 --> 00:08:35,000 that helps people move forward. 137 00:08:35,000 --> 00:08:38,280 Personal knowledge is one of the gifts of writing manuscripts for publication. 138 00:08:38,280 --> 00:08:42,520 And I want to invite you to do it because yeah, you know, you see all these patients, 139 00:08:42,520 --> 00:08:47,240 but when you have to put into words and when you have to like look in the literature and 140 00:08:47,240 --> 00:08:50,760 say, okay, where does this fit relative to what people are saying? 141 00:08:50,760 --> 00:08:53,640 How is this different from what the literature is saying? 142 00:08:53,640 --> 00:08:56,400 It really enhances your knowledge base. 143 00:08:56,400 --> 00:08:57,400 It is so awesome. 144 00:08:57,400 --> 00:09:00,720 It is so personally satisfying. 145 00:09:00,720 --> 00:09:06,220 And I invite you, if you have not kind of like just, you know, enjoyed the experience 146 00:09:06,220 --> 00:09:08,000 of kind of knowledge of writing. 147 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:13,360 I mean, the experience of like growing in your knowledge as you write, it's absolutely 148 00:09:13,360 --> 00:09:15,600 worth it and I recommend it. 149 00:09:15,600 --> 00:09:20,560 Okay, so personal knowledge is one of the gifts of publishing. 150 00:09:20,560 --> 00:09:24,320 The second is conversation with the scientific community. 151 00:09:24,320 --> 00:09:28,720 And I'm keeping it positive here because conversation with the scientific community actually also 152 00:09:28,720 --> 00:09:32,720 refers to peer review, but I'm not really talking about peer review right now. 153 00:09:32,720 --> 00:09:37,440 I'm talking about what you have to do to be able to actually write a manuscript for publication. 154 00:09:37,440 --> 00:09:38,800 You need to know the literature. 155 00:09:38,800 --> 00:09:43,520 Okay, you don't have to know everything, but you need to know a broad swath of the literature 156 00:09:43,520 --> 00:09:46,400 related to your topic that you're publishing on. 157 00:09:46,400 --> 00:09:51,800 So you are having a conversation with other scientists indirectly through their work, 158 00:09:51,800 --> 00:09:52,800 right? 159 00:09:52,800 --> 00:09:54,800 You go and you say, well, we found this amazing thing. 160 00:09:54,800 --> 00:09:56,680 It's like great, good for you. 161 00:09:56,680 --> 00:09:59,640 How does it converse with what's already in the literature? 162 00:09:59,640 --> 00:10:01,520 Like how does it compare? 163 00:10:01,520 --> 00:10:02,840 Is this the same? 164 00:10:02,840 --> 00:10:03,960 Is it different? 165 00:10:03,960 --> 00:10:05,640 What's new about your work? 166 00:10:05,640 --> 00:10:06,720 What's novel? 167 00:10:06,720 --> 00:10:08,200 What's interesting? 168 00:10:08,200 --> 00:10:11,320 Tell us about your work in light of everything that's going on. 169 00:10:11,320 --> 00:10:12,320 And it's so important. 170 00:10:12,320 --> 00:10:15,720 It's the reason why when we write manuscripts for publication, we have all this list of 171 00:10:15,720 --> 00:10:17,600 citations, right? 172 00:10:17,600 --> 00:10:19,040 Because we've looked up other papers. 173 00:10:19,040 --> 00:10:20,800 I hope you're not just putting numbers on the page. 174 00:10:20,800 --> 00:10:22,720 I hope you've actually looked at these citations. 175 00:10:22,720 --> 00:10:26,680 But you really are in conversation with the scientific community, with other people through 176 00:10:26,680 --> 00:10:27,680 their work. 177 00:10:27,680 --> 00:10:29,360 That's a beautiful thing. 178 00:10:29,360 --> 00:10:32,680 It's a beautiful thing because science doesn't happen in a vacuum. 179 00:10:32,680 --> 00:10:39,480 And our data is totally impartial, but the way we interpret the data is not, right? 180 00:10:39,480 --> 00:10:43,520 I am a biased person interpreting my data in a biased way. 181 00:10:43,520 --> 00:10:44,880 The data is not biased. 182 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:47,800 My interpretation of the data is biased. 183 00:10:47,800 --> 00:10:51,940 And the question is, is it biased toward the way it's reported in the literature? 184 00:10:51,940 --> 00:10:53,920 Was it biased against it? 185 00:10:53,920 --> 00:11:00,480 And so, being in conversation with the literature allows you to sort that out and talk about 186 00:11:00,480 --> 00:11:01,480 it. 187 00:11:01,480 --> 00:11:06,480 And maybe that at the end, you're sticking with your biases as opposed to what's like, 188 00:11:06,480 --> 00:11:08,100 where the literature is leading you. 189 00:11:08,100 --> 00:11:11,760 And that's fine, but you're going to be explicit and you're going to state it. 190 00:11:11,760 --> 00:11:13,400 You're going to be explicit about it. 191 00:11:13,400 --> 00:11:15,120 And then you're going to get past the reviewers, right? 192 00:11:15,120 --> 00:11:16,600 But this is not about the reviewers. 193 00:11:16,600 --> 00:11:19,680 So I'm not talking about that kind of science communication today. 194 00:11:19,680 --> 00:11:25,120 But it's a great conversation because the work you do, the patients you see, none of 195 00:11:25,120 --> 00:11:26,720 it is happening in a vacuum. 196 00:11:26,720 --> 00:11:31,720 And so the opportunity to converse with the scientific community is amazing. 197 00:11:31,720 --> 00:11:34,400 It's great because it enhances you. 198 00:11:34,400 --> 00:11:39,040 It's not just knowledge that you're growing in. 199 00:11:39,040 --> 00:11:46,600 It's also growing in the discourse and the ability to communicate your work scientifically. 200 00:11:46,600 --> 00:11:47,600 And that's really awesome. 201 00:11:47,600 --> 00:11:51,120 Number three is that you're growing in skills. 202 00:11:51,120 --> 00:11:56,400 So we've talked about the growth as far as like knowledge growth, the growth as far as 203 00:11:56,400 --> 00:12:00,560 knowing how to converse with the scientific community through the work of others who have 204 00:12:00,560 --> 00:12:04,720 come before you, but also growing in the skill of writing. 205 00:12:04,720 --> 00:12:09,400 Now I will tell you that there are many scientific manuscripts that I read and I'm like, okay, 206 00:12:09,400 --> 00:12:13,120 didn't understand exactly what they did, but it sounds really cool. 207 00:12:13,120 --> 00:12:20,240 But you know, the more you do it and the more seasoned journals, I'll call them seasoned 208 00:12:20,240 --> 00:12:25,080 journals that you go after, the higher the quality of your writing needs to be, the higher 209 00:12:25,080 --> 00:12:30,440 the quality of your synthesis, the higher the quality of the work that you pull together. 210 00:12:30,440 --> 00:12:31,740 And so it challenges you. 211 00:12:31,740 --> 00:12:34,520 It challenges you to grow in skill. 212 00:12:34,520 --> 00:12:38,920 It challenges you to grow in quality. 213 00:12:38,920 --> 00:12:45,000 It challenges you to do the case reports, but then move beyond the case reports to case 214 00:12:45,000 --> 00:12:52,600 series and then move beyond that to clinical studies or to actual clinical trials, to different 215 00:12:52,600 --> 00:12:53,600 things. 216 00:12:53,600 --> 00:12:56,080 So you're not really understanding what your area of research is, but it really helps you 217 00:12:56,080 --> 00:13:01,520 grow in skill because writing a manuscript is not just about the writing, which is amazing 218 00:13:01,520 --> 00:13:04,360 because you're growing your writing skills and your science communication. 219 00:13:04,360 --> 00:13:05,360 That's awesome. 220 00:13:05,360 --> 00:13:09,440 But it's also about all the skills you have to grow in to be able to have something to 221 00:13:09,440 --> 00:13:11,480 put down on the manuscript, right? 222 00:13:11,480 --> 00:13:16,840 You've got to first of all, do the work or make the observation or do the analysis before 223 00:13:16,840 --> 00:13:22,760 you now say, oh, I'm going to put it on paper and I'm going to submit it as a manuscript. 224 00:13:22,760 --> 00:13:28,800 And the fact that you are in the process of writing and publishing regularly allows you 225 00:13:28,800 --> 00:13:34,800 to keep looking for opportunities to continue to grow things that you can put on paper and 226 00:13:34,800 --> 00:13:36,560 share with the scientific community. 227 00:13:36,560 --> 00:13:40,360 So it's really great because it helps you grow in your research skills. 228 00:13:40,360 --> 00:13:43,280 It helps you grow in your writing as well. 229 00:13:43,280 --> 00:13:45,680 And I call it a keystone habit. 230 00:13:45,680 --> 00:13:50,480 And so a keystone habit comes from Charles Duhigg, the power of habit, where there's 231 00:13:50,480 --> 00:13:54,320 one habit you start doing that changes everything else around you. 232 00:13:54,320 --> 00:13:58,960 For example, you start exercising and all of a sudden you change the way you eat. 233 00:13:58,960 --> 00:14:01,000 So it's a keystone habit. 234 00:14:01,000 --> 00:14:05,320 When you start to write for publications, it's a keystone habit because the more you 235 00:14:05,320 --> 00:14:08,640 write and publish, the more you look for it to write and publish. 236 00:14:08,640 --> 00:14:16,400 So it's kind of like a self-fulfilling prophecy, so to speak, or feedback loop really of continuing 237 00:14:16,400 --> 00:14:22,880 to help you create what is needed for the next manuscript and then the next manuscript 238 00:14:22,880 --> 00:14:24,560 and then the next one after that. 239 00:14:24,560 --> 00:14:28,440 So it really does help you grow in your skills. 240 00:14:28,440 --> 00:14:32,800 The next one, which is number four, is expertise. 241 00:14:32,800 --> 00:14:35,560 Okay, you're the one writing about it. 242 00:14:35,560 --> 00:14:36,560 You are the expert. 243 00:14:36,560 --> 00:14:41,400 You know, recently I wrote a manuscript and I wrote the manuscript because I was part 244 00:14:41,400 --> 00:14:45,400 of the guidelines writing committee for the American Society for Atheresis. 245 00:14:45,400 --> 00:14:50,000 And as part of that, I created, you know, I developed one of their new fact sheets. 246 00:14:50,000 --> 00:14:53,720 And having put in all that energy, I remember thinking, I was like, there is no way this 247 00:14:53,720 --> 00:14:55,440 is not going to become a review paper. 248 00:14:55,440 --> 00:14:56,440 There's just no way. 249 00:14:56,440 --> 00:15:00,560 I mean, I mean, we were clearly writing the guidelines, so that was its own paper. 250 00:15:00,560 --> 00:15:05,860 But I felt like so much work had gone into this new fact sheet that it needed to become 251 00:15:05,860 --> 00:15:07,720 its own review paper. 252 00:15:07,720 --> 00:15:13,240 And so I pulled the work together and I wrote it and I submitted it and it was, you know, 253 00:15:13,240 --> 00:15:14,520 accepted and it was published. 254 00:15:14,520 --> 00:15:18,580 And then all of a sudden people start coming out of the woodworks asking me to review papers 255 00:15:18,580 --> 00:15:20,280 that are similar. 256 00:15:20,280 --> 00:15:24,040 And many times I had to say, but no, this is not my area of expertise. 257 00:15:24,040 --> 00:15:27,800 I mean, well, this is not my area of expertise. 258 00:15:27,800 --> 00:15:30,560 They're like, wait a minute, but you wrote about it. 259 00:15:30,560 --> 00:15:38,000 Yeah, but yeah, but how do you convince people that you're not the expert after you've just 260 00:15:38,000 --> 00:15:39,400 written one paper? 261 00:15:39,400 --> 00:15:41,280 Very hard to do. 262 00:15:41,280 --> 00:15:42,600 Because you know what? 263 00:15:42,600 --> 00:15:47,240 It is a rare topic and you are one of very few people who've written about it. 264 00:15:47,240 --> 00:15:49,560 And now everybody wants to hear your opinion. 265 00:15:49,560 --> 00:15:51,480 And to be honest, you kind of are the expert. 266 00:15:51,480 --> 00:15:55,600 The person who writes about it is the expert because they're the ones thinking about it 267 00:15:55,600 --> 00:15:58,560 in ways that nobody else is thinking about it. 268 00:15:58,560 --> 00:16:05,120 And so if you want to become an expert, if you want to become the expert, the go-to expert, 269 00:16:05,120 --> 00:16:10,040 you choose one area and you're right in it and you're right in it and you're right in 270 00:16:10,040 --> 00:16:14,200 this field until you are tired of writing in this field. 271 00:16:14,200 --> 00:16:17,560 You'll never get tired because you'll always find new things to write about. 272 00:16:17,560 --> 00:16:19,160 But you become the expert. 273 00:16:19,160 --> 00:16:21,920 That's how you become the expert, by writing about things. 274 00:16:21,920 --> 00:16:25,480 And so it's a great thing to grow in expertise. 275 00:16:25,480 --> 00:16:29,440 And it's a great thing to grow in expertise because the next time you go around to writing 276 00:16:29,440 --> 00:16:34,900 on the same topic, you're a different person coming to this second piece of writing than 277 00:16:34,900 --> 00:16:37,920 you were the first time you came to this space. 278 00:16:37,920 --> 00:16:42,960 And you now have some understanding under your belt of this field that you didn't have 279 00:16:42,960 --> 00:16:43,960 the first time. 280 00:16:43,960 --> 00:16:48,280 And then multiply that by 20, multiply that by 30. 281 00:16:48,280 --> 00:16:57,360 Now 30 papers later, you have nuances of understanding, nuanced understanding that nobody else has 282 00:16:57,360 --> 00:17:01,240 because you are the expert writing in this space. 283 00:17:01,240 --> 00:17:09,520 And so expertise is one of the gifts of writing for publication. 284 00:17:09,520 --> 00:17:14,200 The last one, number five, is raising the next generation. 285 00:17:14,200 --> 00:17:17,360 When you first start out, you want to be first author on everything. 286 00:17:17,360 --> 00:17:21,960 And when you can't be first author on everything, you're like, well, can I be co-first author? 287 00:17:21,960 --> 00:17:28,480 And it's important, it's necessary in our field because there are some fields where 288 00:17:28,480 --> 00:17:31,440 being first does not necessarily mean you did everything. 289 00:17:31,440 --> 00:17:34,920 Anyway, the different fields have different conventions. 290 00:17:34,920 --> 00:17:41,600 But in my field, as a clinician scientist, the first author is usually the one who's 291 00:17:41,600 --> 00:17:45,800 done the bulk of the work and then they're working together with the senior author. 292 00:17:45,800 --> 00:17:49,640 So there is a convention where the first author is kind of doing the most work. 293 00:17:49,640 --> 00:17:53,660 And so when you first get started, you are the one doing the most work and you're mostly 294 00:17:53,660 --> 00:17:56,720 doing it in collaboration with a mentor. 295 00:17:56,720 --> 00:18:02,320 But as you advance, then you start to move. 296 00:18:02,320 --> 00:18:09,360 And you have other people work with you and you start to move to the place of being the 297 00:18:09,360 --> 00:18:13,640 senior person, the last author on the list. 298 00:18:13,640 --> 00:18:18,120 And that's awesome because it means you are now mentoring another generation to write 299 00:18:18,120 --> 00:18:19,600 and publish. 300 00:18:19,600 --> 00:18:24,400 And it's so powerful, it's so beautiful because, you know, by yourself, you can only write 301 00:18:24,400 --> 00:18:30,320 so much, but the moment you start mentoring others to write manuscripts, that's so awesome 302 00:18:30,320 --> 00:18:36,720 because you can really, you know, triple your impact, quadruple your impact because now 303 00:18:36,720 --> 00:18:43,000 you have other people that you are writing through or you are mentoring to write with. 304 00:18:43,000 --> 00:18:45,000 And it's so beautiful, it's so awesome. 305 00:18:45,000 --> 00:18:49,480 Now, the thing about that is that you are going to have to put in work to help bring 306 00:18:49,480 --> 00:18:54,060 them up to the excellence with which you already write. 307 00:18:54,060 --> 00:18:57,180 You get good at writing when you've written a couple of times, right? 308 00:18:57,180 --> 00:19:01,840 You get good at synthesizing the literature and writing the discussion. 309 00:19:01,840 --> 00:19:05,320 And when a younger person, a trainee now comes to you and says, hey, I want to write a paper 310 00:19:05,320 --> 00:19:08,440 with you, you're good at that stuff because you've done it. 311 00:19:08,440 --> 00:19:12,200 But now you have to teach them and you've got to be patient and you've got to help them, 312 00:19:12,200 --> 00:19:15,200 you know, go through and do a great job. 313 00:19:15,200 --> 00:19:20,080 It's a commitment, it's a challenge, but it's also really rewarding. 314 00:19:20,080 --> 00:19:24,240 You're raising the next generation of scientists and that's really awesome. 315 00:19:24,240 --> 00:19:28,840 But you don't get to do that until you've put in the work of writing manuscripts for 316 00:19:28,840 --> 00:19:33,360 publication to yourself, until you've put in the work of going through reviewers and 317 00:19:33,360 --> 00:19:37,640 knowing how the reviewers will come at your manuscript and knowing how to respond to the 318 00:19:37,640 --> 00:19:38,640 reviewers. 319 00:19:38,640 --> 00:19:44,780 You don't get to lead others in doing this work until you've done it well. 320 00:19:44,780 --> 00:19:49,700 And so that's a beautiful thing that as you are, if you are still kind of at the place 321 00:19:49,700 --> 00:19:55,500 where you are writing as first author, most of the time, just recognize that you are building 322 00:19:55,500 --> 00:19:59,520 a skill set that you're going to pass on to another generation of scientists. 323 00:19:59,520 --> 00:20:02,520 And that's a really, really incredible thing. 324 00:20:02,520 --> 00:20:09,160 Okay, so I've given you five reasons, five reasons why you should enjoy writing manuscripts 325 00:20:09,160 --> 00:20:10,680 for publication today. 326 00:20:10,680 --> 00:20:13,880 Don't wait until promotion and tenure six years from now. 327 00:20:13,880 --> 00:20:14,880 Enjoy it today. 328 00:20:14,880 --> 00:20:20,680 And those five reasons are personal knowledge, conversation with the scientific community 329 00:20:20,680 --> 00:20:26,280 indirectly through their writing, growth in skills, not just the skills for writing, but 330 00:20:26,280 --> 00:20:30,960 also the skills for doing the research, expertise because hey, you're writing about it. 331 00:20:30,960 --> 00:20:35,360 Now you know more than everybody else than reason next generation, which I think may 332 00:20:35,360 --> 00:20:39,320 be the most beautiful thing about writing for me today. 333 00:20:39,320 --> 00:20:44,400 All right, if that has been helpful to you, I want to invite you to please leave a review 334 00:20:44,400 --> 00:20:45,400 on our website. 335 00:20:45,400 --> 00:20:49,120 If you've been listening and you've enjoyed any of these podcasts, episodes, and they've 336 00:20:49,120 --> 00:20:52,760 been helpful to you, I want to invite you to please leave a review because it helps 337 00:20:52,760 --> 00:20:53,760 people find us. 338 00:20:53,760 --> 00:20:59,720 It helps people, it helps validate the podcast as a source of good information. 339 00:20:59,720 --> 00:21:04,880 What do you do when you go and you want to buy something on say a merchant like Amazon, 340 00:21:04,880 --> 00:21:07,840 you look at the reviews, like is this worth buying? 341 00:21:07,840 --> 00:21:09,600 Is this worth listening to? 342 00:21:09,600 --> 00:21:14,880 And so I invite you if you are enjoying this episode or if you've enjoyed other episodes 343 00:21:14,880 --> 00:21:20,240 that we've done to leave us a five star review and I appreciate you in advance for doing 344 00:21:20,240 --> 00:21:21,240 that. 345 00:21:21,240 --> 00:21:25,200 All right, it's been a pleasure talking with you today and thank you for taking the time 346 00:21:25,200 --> 00:21:37,880 to listen and I look forward to talking with you again the next time. 347 00:21:37,880 --> 00:21:43,240 Thanks for listening to this episode of the Clinician Researcher Podcast where academic 348 00:21:43,240 --> 00:21:49,080 clinicians learn the skills to build their own research program whether or not they have 349 00:21:49,080 --> 00:21:50,080 a mentor. 350 00:21:50,080 --> 00:21:56,000 If you found the information in this episode to be helpful, don't keep it all to yourself. 351 00:21:56,000 --> 00:21:57,880 Someone else needs to hear it. 352 00:21:57,880 --> 00:22:01,920 So take a minute right now and share it. 353 00:22:01,920 --> 00:22:07,400 As you share this episode, you become part of our mission to help launch a new generation 354 00:22:07,400 --> 00:22:13,360 of clinician researchers who make transformative discoveries that change the way we do healthcare.