Fall 2021: Clinician Investigator Trainee Association Of Canada (CITAC)

2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. E1-3
Author(s):  
Melissa S. Phuong ◽  
Valera Castanov ◽  
Sophie Hu ◽  
Danny Jomaa ◽  
Wenxuan Wang ◽  
...  

I hope you’re taking care and found some time to relax this summer. A new semester may mean a big transition—some folks are starting their graduate studies, re-entering clerkship, starting residency or entering a fellowship. For some, there will be little or no change at all; but just a continuation of one of the many phases of the physician-scientist training pathway. Whatever stage you’re at, the Clinical Investigator Trainee Association of Canada (CITAC) community is here to support and advocate for you!

2014 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-110
Author(s):  
Celeste Fraser Delgado

It appears to be a ritual among salsa dance scholars to open by sharing a personal salsa experience. I will follow their lead: My introduction to Los Angeles–style salsa came on a Saturday night in the spring of 1999, when I had the pleasure of taking a tour of the city's salsa scene with dance scholar Juliet McMains. Already an established professional ballroom dancer, McMains was just beginning her graduate studies at the University of California–Riverside where I was visiting faculty, having recently co-edited a collection on Latin/o American social dance. Lucky for me, McMains was among the many brilliant students who enrolled in my class on race and dance. The night of our tour, she invited a handsome friend and fellow ballroom dancer to partner first one of us, then the other, throughout the night. He drove us around the city as we stopped at a cramped restaurant-turned-nightclub in a strip mall, at a glamorous ballroom in Beverly Hills, then ended the night downtown at a massive disco in a former movie palace, the Mayan nightclub.


Hematology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 2003 (1) ◽  
pp. 590-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mortimer Poncz ◽  
Robert Iannone ◽  
Ellen M. Werner

Abstract Uppermost among the many concerns of young researchers is acquiring funding for beginning a career as a clinician-scientist. This chapter is targeted specifically at those individuals considering an academic physician-scientist career and those on the verge of becoming independent researchers. In Section I, Drs. Poncz and Iannone discuss the Mentored Career Development Award (K08). They summarize the application process, highlighting the critical components of a successful application and what the review process entails. In Section II, Dr. Werner discusses what applicants need to know about the NIH Institutes’ program, review, and grants management function; the different NIH staff whom applicants should contact during the various stages of the grants process; and the important sections and key phrases in NIH Program Announcements for career development awards.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-86
Author(s):  
PREETI PAHWA ◽  
ANISH SHARMA

This paper describes a project undertaken by the authors during their post-graduate studies at the University of Shefield. The intent of the project was to identify building(s) that need up-gradation/retroit, establish why retroit is required, what kind of retroit is needed and which techniques to employ, using a case-sensitive approach. However, the scope of this paper is limited to the irst two objectives of the project and the recognition of retroit techniques is left open-ended  so as to leave room for future debates and deliberations.The city of Chandigarh has always been highlight prominently on India’s architectural heritage map. Various buildings designed by Le Corbusier and his team (comprising Pierre Jeanerette, Jane Drew and Maxwell Fry) are like jewels (to be treasured) on this map. Still, ever since these buildings, especially the government housings, came into existence, no systematic procedures have been undertaken to analyse and assess their deterioration with time and usage. Passing down the streets of Chandigarh, one would observe how drastically the housings have been modiied, and in some cases, have lost their original appeal.The paper is essentially drafted in three parts. The irst part illustrates the conditions and political background in which these buildings were designed, so as to better understand the essence of this architecture. The second part tries to comprehend the current state of one of the many types of the Government Housings present in Chandigarh – the ‘House Type E1’ in Panjab University. Lastly, the authors use various scales, like present seismic byelaws and Computer Aided simulation tools, to evaluate how the given housing now fares in terms of structural stability and thermal & visual comfort.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mimi Xiaoming Deng

In the last decade, there has been a discrepancy between the increasing recognition for research involvement in medical training and the stagnation in the number physician-scientists. Health research funding cutbacks, inadequate mentorship, heavy schedules, and unfamiliarity with scientific methodology are obstacles that limit research interest amongst junior medical learners and cause attrition of promising physician-scientist in training. This article outlines five strategies to promote and facilitate the development of physician-scientists with the understanding that research is integral to clinical excellence. Some of the ways the undergraduate and postgraduate medical curricula can better lend themselves to producing clinicians with the skillset to address clinical uncertainties through an evidence-based approach are: partnerships between healthcare and academia, increasing admission to MD/PhD and Clinical Investigator programs, establishing fundamentals of scientific thinking, long-term research mentorship, facilitating knowledge translation.


2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 57-58
Author(s):  
Alice G Brandfonbrener

Everyone involved in the practice of medicine is acutely aware that the nature of their work has changed dramatically over the past one to two decades. For one thing, given the requisites of dealing with managed care, Medicare, Medicaid, HMOs, and PPOs, there is a new language to be learned. The new systems often demand spending paperwork time in excess of that allowed for clinical work, filling out a myriad of constantly changing forms, and doing battle, not with one’s medical peers but with unseen gatekeepers trained in business not in medicine, in defense of treatment plans. To add insult to injury, and perhaps even more in conflict with the practice of good medicine, are those cases involving (1) workman’s compensation (WC) and (2) personal injury (PI) litigation. Most physicians presumably elected medicine over other professions, including business or law, and thus have reason to resent the proportion of their time taken from what they do best, taking care of patients, by the many administrative and legal aspects of practicing medicine.


2001 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 267-275
Author(s):  
Esther-Mirjam Sent

When I went through my graduate training in economics at Stanford University, I learned that economics consists of ideas. These are often expressed in mathematical terms and can be found in books and articles. To become a successful economist, you have to understand these ideas and come up with variations on them. So, during my first year of graduate studies, I spent the majority of my time working my way through the many books and articles assigned for my classes in microeconomics, macroeconomics, and econometrics. During their lectures, our instructors would walk us through any difficult mathematical manipulations that we encountered in our readings. Surely, I thought, I was on my way to becoming a respected economist. Still, I needed to specialize in a few fields, which I did in my second year.


Author(s):  
Marybeth Lorbiecki

In September 1939, Germany invaded Poland. During the dark months of 1939, 1940, and 1941, Europe exploded with tanks, bombs, and guns. The violent side of Hitler’s new German policies proved worse than Leopold had imagined possible. A letter arrived from Leopold’s host in Germany, Alfred Schottlaender. Schottlaender’s wife had turned him in to the secret police for making antiHitler comments. He had been interned both at Dachau and Buchenwald but had managed to escape to Kenya. He was writing to ask Aldo to help his brother, who was still in Germany. Leopold contacted those he knew, and a place was found in South Africa for Alfred’s brother. “My dear friend Leopold,” responded Alfred, “[You] have given me back the faith of faithfulness, truth, and friendship still existing on earth, which I nearly had lost after having lived to see such terrible disap­pointments in my own country which I loved so much and served all my life.” Violence seemed to be the common link between the many ways humans acted toward the land and toward each other. Leopold began to refer to con­servation as a movement toward “nonviolent land use,” where changes are made gradually and carefully, keeping the land community stable. Then the exploding violence hit the States: the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. The next day, Carl enlisted in the marines. On the edge of twenty-two, he had just begun graduate studies in wildlife ecology in Missouri. He hurried to marry Keena Rogers before leaving for combat. Luna enlisted in the army and was sent to California as an army engineer. Starker, who had married and was expecting a child, kept working, but dreaded the mail, which could carry a draft notice any day. Many of the Professor’s graduate and undergraduate students quit school to enlist. Vivian Horn resigned to do her part for the war effort. Sometime in 1942, a round robin of letters was begun between the department and those who had left. Each recipient added comments and sent the letter on to some­one else.


2008 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerie Taylor ◽  
Glenda MacQueen

Establishing an independent academic career is a lofty goal and junior physician-scientists have an especially complicated balancing act: caring for patients, conducting experiments and meeting regulatory requirements for human or animal subject research. This balancing act is often accompanied by teaching and administrative tasks, as well as the need to plan a coherent research program, obtain grant funding, and publish in scientific journals while, meanwhile, the clock is ticking. The effort requires a mix of scientific, technical, project management, and interpersonal skills. More intangibly, the path to independence requires flexibility, persistence, and self-confidence. Strong support from an academic institution, stronger support from a mentor and the ability to balance the many facets of both professional and personal responsibilities is essential. For those with such an inclination, successfully combining a clinical and research career can be quite rewarding but it is a career path that carries unique challenges and requires a specific skill set. This may explain why only 199 investigators have completed the clinical investigator programs designed to augment research training in medical residents in Canada since 1995. Establishing productive independence is an achievable goal and while there exists no “template for success,” our experiences of the transition to new investigator, many of which are echoed by colleagues, may identify some of the necessary skills and resources.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Ji Ma

AbstractGiven the many types of suboptimality in perception, I ask how one should test for multiple forms of suboptimality at the same time – or, more generally, how one should compare process models that can differ in any or all of the multiple components. In analogy to factorial experimental design, I advocate for factorial model comparison.


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