Career Growth & Professional Development

Goals, Strategies, and Priority Areas

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Programs that promote diversity of biomedical workforce, enhance and strengthen the minority health and
health disparities research workforce, and provide infrastructure for research capacity-building
activities are needed. Continued efforts to include minorities in research and clinical trials are
essential components of NIH’s minority health and health disparities activities.

Goal 5: Support training to enhance the diversity of the biomedical workforce and to
promote training and advancement of minority health and health disparities researchers

NIH’s continued promotion of a skilled and diverse workforce will facilitate further advancements in the
fields of minority health and health disparities research. A modern and robust workforce with diverse
skill sets and core competencies unique to minority health and health disparities research is needed to
address complex research questions. Programs that address MH and HD workforce preparedness at the
individual level will enhance the expertise of the field and lead to improved capacity for promoting
minority health and addressing health disparities. Individuals identifying as racial and ethnic
minorities, individuals with less privileged SES, and individuals with disabilities are often
underrepresented in the biomedical research workforce. Diversity of the biomedical workforce can be
improved through both individual-level programs and institutional infrastructure aimed at increasing
domestic and international opportunities for individuals from populations experiencing health disparities, including
underrepresented groups, to pursue scientific careers. A diverse biomedical workforce also ensures an
assortment of ideas, perspectives, and backgrounds among the researchers and scientists contributing to
breakthroughs in biomedical research.

Strategy 5.1: Support individual-level programs to train individuals from populations experiencing health disparities in the biomedical sciences.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Link interested students and early-career scientists from diverse backgrounds, including
    underrepresented groups, to researchers across various research disciplines, both at NIH and in the
    extramural research community. NIH encourages these links to be established from pre-college or
    university stages through junior faculty stages to enhance the biomedical research training pipeline.
  • Enable individuals from diverse backgrounds, including underrepresented groups, to achieve research
    career independence by providing networking events, best practices, and guidance on NIH grantsmanship
    and the peer review processes to facilitate (1) both short- and long-term success in NIH grant
    application submissions and (2) achievement of tenure in a suitable timeframe and reentry into the
    biomedical workforce. These resources may be offered at symposia and workshops, in NIH announcements, at
    scientific meetings, and on training websites.

Building Momentum:

  • Take steps to enhance, renew, or expand NIH’s portfolio of scientific education and training
    opportunities for individuals from populations experiencing health disparities, including underrepresented groups, for
    all career stages from pre-college or university through tenure-track faculty.

Strategy 5.2: Support current and novel institution-level programs at institutions
that have a
historical and current commitment to educating underrepresented students and at less research-intensive
institutions to enhance the ability of these programs to recruit, train, and retain a diverse biomedical
research workforce.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support intramural NIH and extramural programs that enable institutions that have a historical and
    current commitment to educating underrepresented students and less research-intensive institutions to
    recruit, train, and retain scholars from populations experiencing health disparities, including underrepresented
    groups, in biomedical science across all career stages from undergraduate through junior faculty stages
    across various basic, clinical, and data science research domains.

Building Momentum:

  • Take steps to enhance research and training environments at NIH and in the extramural research
    community for undergraduate, graduate, and medical institutions serving underrepresented students.

Strategy 5.3: Promote diversity-supporting recruiting programs at
research-intensive institutions
to expand the pool of applicants from health disparity groups underrepresented in biomedical
research.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support recruiting efforts to interest individuals from underrepresented backgrounds to apply for
    opportunities to access and make contributions to NIH-supported research projects in research-intensive
    institutions. These opportunities will help them develop the essential skills and knowledge required to
    achieve their next level of career goals.

Building Momentum:

  • Take steps to enhance diversity and inclusion efforts at research-intensive institutions to provide a
    more welcoming environment for prospective researchers from underrepresented backgrounds from
    pre-college or university stages through junior faculty stages.

Strategy 5.4: Support training and mentorship programs for minority health and
health disparities
researchers at all stages of career development and leadership development.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support programs to train and mentor researchers with expertise in minority health and health
    disparities from pre-college or university through early-stage investigator career stages.

Building Momentum:

  • Take steps to enhance, renew, or expand NIH’s portfolio of scientific education, training, and
    mentoring opportunities for minority health and health disparity researchers from pre-college or
    university stages through established senior investigator careers.

Strategy 5.5: Incorporate development of specialized research skills into health
disparities
training programs, including core and emerging skills that are important for measuring, understanding,
and addressing minority health and health disparities complexities.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support programs to provide researchers opportunities to enhance existing research capabilities or to
    acquire new research capabilities in MH- and HD-related science at the graduate student, junior
    scientist, and senior scientist levels of career stages.

Building Momentum:

  • Take steps to enhance, renew, or add to NIH’s portfolio of intramural and extramural programs
    dedicated to the development of specialized research skills into minority health and health disparities
    research programs, including those fostering the development of scientists from medical, dental,
    veterinary, and other health science disciplines.

Goal 6: Strengthen the national capacity to conduct minority health and health disparities
research

This goal promotes the expansion of the national capacity to conduct minority health and health
disparities research. Creating and/or enhancing infrastructure to support novel and existing research
approaches will facilitate further advancements in the fields of minority health and health disparities.
Programs that address workforce preparedness at the institutional level will strengthen the capability of
the fields to conduct novel and applied research.

Strategy 6.1: Support programs to enhance capacity for minority health and health
disparities
research at all institutions.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support relevant investigator-initiated research projects and multidisciplinary research centers in
    less research-intensive academic institutions—such as institutions that have a historical and current
    commitment to educating underrepresented students and primarily undergraduate institutions—that train
    significant numbers of individuals from populations experiencing health disparities.
  • Support multidisciplinary centers and networks with local, regional, national, and international
    shared research resources such as databases, informatics cores, and biospecimen repositories that have
    meaningful inclusion to foster collaborative translational research relevant to U.S. health disparity
    populations.
  • Build research capacity in community-based and tribal organizations that are positioned to conduct
    population health research on understudied racial and ethnic minority populations because of their
    trusted relationships with those populations.
  • Support annual meetings, symposia, and research education programs across the United States to foster
    the development of a diverse cadre of faculty, students, and community partners who are committed to
    pursuing research on minority health and health disparities.

Building Momentum:

  • Build community-based research hubs that serve as resource centers in order to foster collaborative,
    community-engaged research to address minority health and health disparities.
  • Accelerate efforts to advance understanding of links between environmental exposures and health
    outcomes to promote environmental health literacy and support disease prevention efforts targeted to
    entire communities or regions at risk.
  • Develop innovative ways to sustain community-based environmental health disparities research beyond
    individual grant cycles, and provide the means for community partners and citizen scientists to be more
    actively engaged with research.

Strategy 6.2: Develop and test methods to foster, coordinate, and promote the field
of health
disparities among research institutions and organizations.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Disseminate the NIMHD Health Disparities Research Framework to inform and attract researchers from
    various scientific disciplines to explore the interplay between biological, behavioral, social,
    cultural, environmental, and clinical determinants of health.

Building Momentum:

  • Partner with organizations that certify/license community health workers (CHWs) to standardize
    training of CHWs in intervention research, and assess the impact on health disparity intervention
    research, efficiency, safety, scientific rigor, and reproducibility.
  • Expand NIH efforts to advance citizen science in the field of health disparities as a distinct
    research enterprise led by citizen scientists and community organizations, going beyond traditional
    approaches to community-engaged research led by academic institutions.

Goal 7: Ensure appropriate representation of minority and other populations experiencing health disparities in
NIH-funded research

This goal promotes the inclusion of individuals from minority and other populations experiencing health disparities
(e.g., SGMs, rural, and less privileged SES) in all federally funded research with human participation.
Promoting inclusion in research requires attention throughout the research process, encompassing study
design, implementation, and analyses. Using evidence-based strategies for outreach within minority
communities and study design to enable subpopulation analyses, researchers can promote higher levels of
representation among minority groups and SGMs to understand whether clinical advances are equally
effective among all population groups. Appropriate inclusion of minorities may also support more
meaningful insight into the etiology of minority health concerns and could inform more effective,
culturally competent interventions in minority populations.

Strategy 7.1: Provide guidance, recommendations, and technical assistance for
NIH-funded
researchers in appropriate study design and best practices for recruitment to ensure compliance with
laws, regulations, and policies regarding the inclusion of minorities and other populations experiencing health disparities in research.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support the development of technical assistance and best-research-practice centers to ensure that
    researchers have knowledge of proper study design and recruitment practices for including
    underrepresented populations experiencing health disparities in research.

Building Momentum:

  • Develop general guidance for NIH researchers on how to best incorporate and include underrepresented
    populations experiencing health disparities in research.
  • Expand local, regional, and national efforts to assess the impact of policies and policy changes on
    minority population health, and delineate specific mechanisms by which policies or policy changes
    mitigate or exacerbate systemic social, economic, and environmental disadvantages.

Strategy 7.2: Promote tracking of originally proposed recruitment strategies and
objectives to
ensure sufficient samples for analyses of subpopulation data.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Educate and provide support to research centers regarding optimal recruitment strategies for inclusion
    of underrepresented populations experiencing health disparities in research.

Building Momentum:

  • Develop Requests for Information (RFIs) to generate recommendations for improved tracking of
    recruitment strategies and objectives to ensure sufficient sample sizes for analyses of populations experiencing health disparities and related subpopulation data.

Strategy 7.3: Promote inclusion of minorities and other populations experiencing health disparities in big data
sets, clinical research, and future big science initiatives.

Action Priority Areas

Starting Line:

  • Support established and new research centers in the engagement of underserved health disparity
    communities for recruitment and retention in big data science research.

Building Momentum:

  • Develop systematic monitoring mechanisms to assess successful recruitment and retention of populations experiencing health disparities in NIH-supported research.
  • Strengthen national efforts to increase representation of populations experiencing health disparities in disease
    registries and public health surveillance systems to improve understanding and awareness of population
    health differences within and between groups and across geographic regions.

Page updated Jan. 12, 2024

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