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Eureka! Investigating Careers in ResearchDo you like to ask questions and discover answers? Consider joining the ranks of minority nurse scientists! By Pamela Palmer, EdD
There is definitely a need for more minority researchers, asserts Ida Spruill, RN, MSN, MSW, of the University of South Carolina Medical College in Charleston. When I try to identify mentors and colleagues in research, they are few and far between. I have to think in terms of someone outside my city or state because we just dont have a large enough cadre of minority nurse researchers in this country. Spruill is the coordinator for Project SuGAR (the Sea Islands Genetic African American Registry Project), a community-based research study focusing on African-American families affected by type 2 diabetes. She got involved with the project six years ago when she met W. Timothy Garvey, MD, the studys principal investigator. He came to me at my previous job and asked me to help him find a black nurse to get involved in the project, she says. I looked around and thought of people who might be interestedbut I was interested myself! I found out later that he had actually been told to talk to me about getting involved. Since then, Spruill has not looked back. I enjoy research. The challenge intrigues me, she explains. Back when I was in nursing school, research was an area I knew little about. I never considered going back for my PhD. Now Im staying with Project SuGAR until it ends, and then Im starting a doctoral program. Its important for minority nurses to get involved in researching minority health issues, Spruill continues. We need research that represents our community. Thats one reason Project SuGAR has been successful. The research questions, outcomes and interventions are different when they are determined by someone who is a member of that same population, someone who brings a unique insight. Sometimes in the past, pieces of the puzzle have been left out because of a lack of cultural understanding. Im not saying that Caucasian researchers dont do a good job, but African Americans start with an advantage when researching an African-American population. Asking the Why QuestionsSpruills route into a research career was unusual in two ways. She doesnt have a doctorateyetand she was not originally based at a college or universitythe usual prerequisites for researchers. But when Garvey approached her for the SuGAR Project, she already had a research role model: Dr. Linda Burnes Bolton, RN, FAAN, vice president and chief nursing officer at Cedars-Sinai Health Systems in Los Angeles. She sparked my interest in research, Spruill explains. I met her through the National Black Nurses Association. She was one of the first people who helped me see that African Americans can go into research. Talking with Bolton also changed Spruills whole perception of what research is all about. Prior to meeting her, my idea of research was dusty books and working alone in a room. She gave me an understanding of what is really involved. Spruills attraction to scientific investigation was also sparked by the fact that she had unanswered questions about health issues. For her, research was the way to find answers. Wanting to know why things happen is an essential trait of any good researcher, agrees Karen DApolito, PhD, RN, assistant professor of nursing at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. DApolito, who is African American, got her start in the field by wanting to validate our practice through practice-based research in neonatal nursing. I first realized that I wanted to do research around 1985, she says. I had received my masters degree four years earlier and was working as a clinical specialist and nursing educator. But I wanted to do more. That was when I got involved in research and decided to earn my PhD in nursing. How can you know if research is the right career choice for you? The key is knowing your ultimate goals, DApolito advises. She recommends that potential nurse scientists consider the kind of contribution they want to make to the profession and whether they are geared more toward being a practitioner or looking inquisitively at health care issues. As she explains, People who question care-giving procedures are the ones who are best suited to improve them. DApolito is alert to students who show an interest in research. They ask the why questions, she says. And they dont accept answers like thats just the way we do it. They want to know why one way is better than another. Potential researchers like to read the literature and are open-minded to discovering more than one way to do something. These are the people who are likely to become good scientists. At Delaware State University in Dover, Del., Nursing Department Professor and Chair Mary Watkins, PhD, RN, also watches for potential researchers among her students. They need to be critical thinkers, she says. They must be able to analyze and apply information, and they need to be willing to earn a doctorate. Educators can tell early which students show a talent for research. When our students take the Introduction to Research course, we can tell from their interest level. Research is very time-consuming. You have to have commitment to become a researcher. Her own motivation is central to the research process. I became a researcher because I realized that it is part of what I need to do to gain and create knowledge. Watkins dissertation focused on decision-making among nursing students at the diploma level. Today she continues to conduct research into decision-making processes in health care. Being a nurse researcher is such a time-consuming venture that you need to establish a research agenda for your career, Watkins emphasizes. You will usually continue to study in the same general area over time, so the earlier you identify your area of interest [such as cancer, mental health, etc.], the more opportunity youll have to get substantial research done during your career. Ivy-Covered Halls vs. Clinic WallsFor Watkins, academic liferather than clinical practiceis the environment of choice. From the outset of my career, I wanted to teach, she recalls. My mother was a teacher and my aunt was a nurse. Mother and I had a debate. She said, You dont want to be a nurse; you want to be a teacher. Then as I developed in nursing, I saw I could teach and do research, too. Ive been tempted to leave academe and go into the clinical setting as an administrator, but I enjoy sharing what I know. Making the choice between clinical research and academic research can be difficult. Both have their pros and cons. From the salary standpoint, clinician researchers make much more money than academicians, Watkins notes. Universities have always paid less. Thats why there is such a shortage of nursing faculty. If I try to recruit a potential faculty member from a hospital, they are probably making 30% more than I can offer them. But the love of teaching does draw some nurses into academia. Clinical work does not have all the advantages, though. Getting summers off with time to refuel is a persuasive factor in favor of teaching. On the other side of the equation, however, young faculty members sometimes struggle to balance the demands of teaching, research and providing service to the university or community by serving on committees or doing volunteer work. But regardless of which setting researchers choose to work in, there are many opportunities for minority nurses, Watkins says. For the underserved minorities in the U.S. population, there has only been limited research on their health problems and needs. Yet they suffer from heart disease, cancer and many other diseases at rates higher than the Caucasian population. More funding [for health disparity research projects] would help, but it doesnt seem to be getting easier for minority nurses to get funding. And I Can Prove It!I got started in research because Im nosy, says Carla S. King, PhD, RN, who is CEO of Carla King and Associates in Boulder, Colo. Ive always been interested in getting better care for poor people. In nursing school I learned a lot, but I felt that there had to be a better way to address these concerns. I wanted to make a difference. I found out that my opinions and ideas countedbut they had much more credibility when I could back them up with documentation. That made them more than just Carlas ideas or opinions. I could say: This is what I thought and here is the objective information I collected, and this is what I want to change. As the head of her own business, King, who is African American, does health care consultation, programming and outcomes research. She sees a growing interest in research by nurses in clinical practice. Nursing as a profession needs to do more research in order to demonstrate our position as experts and to document our effectiveness, she says. There are many types of research that need to be done, King adds. Clinical nurses need to be a part of it as well. They may see things in their work environment that could be changed to improve patient care. Sometimes research comes from seeing things you want to improve, but you need hard data to document the need for that change. Or clinical nurses may have administrative concerns. They need to present data to show how doing something differently would be better for the hospital. Research isnt just for the academicians. Whats the best way to get started in a research career? Daniel ONeal III, RN, MA, CS, chief of the Office of Science Policy and Public Liaison at the National Institute of Nursing Research, offers this advice: Collaborating with someone and doing a piece of their research work is the best way for a beginning nurse researcher to get involved. Colleagueship and cross-age cohorts are part of the gamethe established researchers are always helping the new group of researchers. In addition, going to conferences and association meetings can help you get started. Publish or PerishAlthough the exact number of minority nurse researchers is not known, published research studies focusing on minority health issues are on the increase. One interesting thing about being an editor is that you rarely know the ethnicity of authors, but about 10% of the research I see is minority-focused, says Molly C. Dougherty, PhD, RN, FAAN, editor of the journal Nursing Research. Dougherty, who is also the Francis Hill Fox Professor of Nursing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, believes that minority health is definitely a growing area of research. It is being driven by the National Institutes of Healths emphasis on research in this area and the increasing amount of work being done to address racial and ethnic health disparities. Dougherty says the majority of research articles submitted to her journal come from nurse researchers at universities. Nurses in clinical practice tend to be co-authors. Academic life is the primary way nurses get into research, she says. But today theres a growing emphasis on programs that prepare nurses to manage clinical trialsat medical schools, health science centers and drug companies. Judith Graves, PhD, RN, FAAN, sees nursing research on the upswing from her vantage point as managing editor of the 1999 Directory of Nurse Researchers. There are now more nursing researchers than ever, she says. When we compiled our first edition 15 years ago, there were only 500 or 600 researchers. Now we have 12,000 nurse researchers registered, and I estimate that this is only about half the actual number in the U.S. Most of them are housed in academeits very difficult to get funding if you are not. Even private funding sources do not seem to fund people without an academic base. Universities provide the environment that supports research. Though the Directory of Nurse Researchers does not record researchers race or ethnicity, Graves agrees that minority-focused research is on the rise. The trend toward more minority health research started about 10 or 12 years ago, she notes. Nurses are more aware of the need for cross-cultural knowledge, and more minorities are going into doctoral programs and becoming researchers. Dr. Pamela Palmer is a free-lance writer who specializes in career, business and technology topics. |
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