PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Neil M. Goldenberg AU - Benjamin E. Steinberg AU - James T. Rutka AU - Robert Chen AU - Val Cabral AU - Norman D. Rosenblum AU - Andras Kapus AU - Warren L. Lee TI - Research projects in the Surgeon-Scientist and Clinician-Investigator programs at the University of Toronto (1987-2016): a cohort study AID - 10.9778/cmajo.20160062 DP - 2016 Aug 22 TA - CMAJ Open PG - E444--E447 VI - 4 IP - 3 4099 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/4/3/E444.short 4100 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/4/3/E444.full AB - Background: Physicians have traditionally been at the forefront of medical research, bringing clinical questions to the laboratory and returning with ideas for treatment. However, we have anecdotally observed a decline in the popularity of basic science research among trainees. We hypothesized that fewer resident physicians have been pursuing basic science research training over time.Methods: We examined records from residents in the Surgeon-Scientist and Clinician-Investigator programs at the University of Toronto (1987-2016). Research by residents was categorized independently by 2 raters as basic science, clinical epidemiology or education-related based on the title of the project, the name of the supervisor and Pubmed searches. The study population was divided into quintiles of time, and the proportion pursuing basic science training in each quintile was calculated.Results: Agreement between the raters was 100%; the categorization of the research topic remained unclear in 9 cases. The proportion of trainees pursuing basic science training dropped by 60% from 1987 to 2016 (p = 0.005).Interpretation: Significantly fewer residents in the Surgeon-Scientist and Clinician-Investigator Programs at the University of Toronto are pursuing training in the basic sciences as compared with previous years.