Before Andy Auerbach, MD, MPH, concludes a four-year term as chair of SHM’s Research Committee, I talked with him about his perspective on hospital medicine research. Dr. Auerbach is an associate professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.
He received a career development award from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) early in his career and is the principal investigator of an R01 research project grant from the NHLBI titled “Improving use of perioperative beta-blockers through a multidimensional QI program.”
He is also a co-author of “Outcomes of Patients Treated by Hospitalists, General Internists, and Family Physicians” in the December 2007 New England Journal of Medicine, which found statistically significant differences in length of stay and cost. He received his medical degree from Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, N.H., and did his residency training in internal medicine at Yale New Haven Hospital in Connecticut. He completed an MPH in clinical epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston in 1998.
Q: So, is academia as glamorous as it sounds?
Dr. Auerbach: Way more glamorous—you should see my office. And yes, we are in a white tower.
Q: How did you get your start in research?
Dr. Auerbach: I actually started out my research fellowship wanting to be a cardiologist and go into the cath lab while developing the skills to participate in and teach research methods. I found I really enjoyed the work, particularly the creative and entrepreneurial aspects of developing a project or grant and seeing it through to completion.
Q: What are the research options for hospitalists practicing in nonteaching settings?
Dr. Auerbach: I think the most straightforward way to participate in research is to partner with a clinical research organization to help enroll patients in their trials. While you don’t get the opportunity to design the study, you do get to get a feel for consent/enrollment and internal review board [IRB] processes.
The next best way to get involved with research is to partner with a researcher—and this need not be a hospitalist—at your site or very near by. Many QI projects are close to being research-ready and may provide an opportunity to make that work count twice. But it will require you to learn about analytic methods.
I’d also be remiss if I didn’t mention the value of other very useful academic products—rigorous reports of a QI intervention (think of both success and failure stories) and patient case reports. If well referenced and used as teaching documents, these can be very useful ways to advance knowledge.
Q: Are there any particular prerequisites in terms of training that you find especially helpful as you conduct your research?
Dr. Auerbach: It is hard to be a capital-R “Researcher” and compete for career development grants and NIH funding without some advanced [degrees] and a clinical research fellowship. I hesitate to call these prerequisites, but they are nearly so.