Innovation and careers
At medical faculties, many researchers are not only academics but also clinicians or hold other roles, often balancing parallel careers in research, health care and education. Innovation efforts can feel like 'yet another race', impeding progress in other career paths. In addition, there is a high risk that an innovation project will not achieve its intended goals.
The most successful research cultures are those where researchers at different career stages work together to ensure that innovation is an integral part of research and career development.
Researchers report a need to better understand how research can be applied to benefit patients and society, and this should be taught through undergraduate and doctoral programmes, as well as within research groups. Institutions should recognise innovation as a valued part of the researcher, educator and clinician roles – rather than a sideline – with incentives, career pathways and recognition structured accordingly.
Institutions should recognise innovation as a valued part of the researcher, educator and clinician roles – rather than a sideline
Frameworks and support structures are needed to enable the development of robust innovation competence within academia, thereby fostering a culture of innovation and a reputation as strong R&D partners. Opportunities under current regulations should be maximised, without letting additional safeguards hinder developments that benefit patients. A key prerequisite for success is predictable processes for sharing health data with industry and other collaboration partners.