• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Inside Philanthropy

Inside Philanthropy

Who's Funding What & Why

Facebook LinkedIn X
  • Grant Finder
  • For Donors
  • Learn
    • State of American Philanthropy
    • Explainers
  • Articles
    • Arts and Culture
    • Civic
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Global
    • Health
    • Science
    • Social Justice
  • Places
  • Jobs
  • Search Our Site

Who’s Backing an Effort to Ease the Career Versus Caregiving Conflict for Biomedical Researchers?

Paul Karon | December 13, 2021

Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on X Share via Email
Banner for article Who’s Backing an Effort to Ease the Career Versus Caregiving Conflict for Biomedical Researchers?
PHOTO: ROCKETCLIPS

The pandemic has triggered serious new stresses throughout society, but it has just as often highlighted and exacerbated very old problems. One such problem is the collision of career and caregiving responsibilities for working people.

Getting ahead professionally often takes dedication and long hours. But what if you have to take care of young children, elderly parents or an ailing spouse? What if you’re an early-career faculty member at a biomedical research institution and your job involves teaching in the medical school, conducting research and running a lab, writing and publishing papers, and other departmental administrative services? Something’s gotta give, and often it’s career that suffers. This is especially true for women in the workforce, who still shoulder the bulk of caregiving burdens, whether of children, elders or significant others. And studies have shown this burden is even greater for women of color.

A new collaboration of funders, organized by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation (DDCF), is betting that institutional buy-in can ensure that career and caregiving aren’t mutually exclusive.

The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, which supports medical research in its grantmaking, has been working on this issue since 2015 with a fund focused on helping early-career physicians on medical school faculties handle their research responsibilities. But add in a couple of years of pandemic-catalyzed problems and the equation gets a lot more complicated, said Sindy Escobar-Alvarez, program director for medical research at DDCF.

Some researchers have quit academia altogether. That’s the kind of worst-case outcome DDCF and its partners are trying to prevent. Not to put too fine a point on it, but we’re talking about clinical researchers here, the kind of people who search for cures and therapies, develop vaccines for global disease threats, and the like. Society has a strong interest in keeping our clinical researchers thriving at work.

In response, DDCF has relaunched the researcher support initiative with a lot more money—and the additional firepower of five high-profile philanthropic partners—and recently announced the program’s first round of grants to U.S. medical schools. The goal of the grants is to encourage and reward leadership of medical schools and biomedical research institutions for efforts to address caregiving needs among staff.

The new program, called the COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists, recently announced its first round of funding: $12.1 million in grants to 22 medical schools. The money will support up to 250 early-career biomedical faculty who face additional caregiving needs, providing funds to help them keep their research on track by hiring additional clinical staff, or in other ways. Collaborating on the COVID-19 Fund to Retain Clinical Scientists are the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Rita Allen Foundation, the John Templeton Foundation, the American Heart Association and the Walder Foundation.

Although male researchers obviously have caregiving burdens, women are more likely to leave academic research as a result of such family considerations, said Escobar-Alvarez. “At the medical school level, we see parity in gender of the students, even slightly more women, but at the higher levels in research institutions there are many more men,” she said.

This is more than a matter of making life easier for busy young doctors and biomedical researchers. According to a survey from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, over 40% of young physicians with full-time faculty appointments at medical schools leave academia within 10 years. According to one estimate, it costs about $1.1 million to train a physician, and some of those costs are indirectly provided by federal tax dollars. That means medical schools and the biomedical research field risk losing the best young talent to this work-caregiving crunch, and the public loses some of the potential benefits of its investment.

The National Academies survey highlighted the needs of caregivers and helped spark the initiative, said Miquella Chavez Rose, program officer at the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. “We invest so much in these researchers, it’s important to retain them. They’ve already shown they can accomplish so much—for them to have to drop out because of [caregiving needs] that happen to everybody, seems unwise.”

Throughout academia, and particularly in STEMM fields, people of color have long been underrepresented. Efforts to boost equity have made gains, but not quickly. This new fund to retain clinical scientists, the funders say, aims to support diversity in this not-fully diversified workforce.

Sam Gill, CEO and president of DDCF, hopes the program’s collaborative nature will deliver impact over and above the six funders’ contributions. “All of the foundations joining with us in this effort have been working to ensure that the biomedical sciences can be more equitable and inclusive,” he said. “As a collaboration, we can send a message to institutions that this is a real priority.”

The biomedical field obviously isn’t the only profession, inside or outside academia, where people must choose between work and family. It’s pretty much a universal challenge. While philanthropy has fewer tools to directly address these concerns in workplaces like for-profit companies, it may well have an important role to play as a voice for federal action that can ensure that family demands don’t put careers in jeopardy or prevent people from building the income and savings needed to bring about a more equitable society.

Featured

Why Three Top Science Philanthropies Think Open Source Software’s a Good Investment

How a New Philanthropy Advisory Firm Aims to Drive Science and Tech Innovation

What’s Next for the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation?

Neuroscience Funders Are Moving in Unexpected Directions: Three Boundary-Pushing Initiatives

Jim Simons Gave Billions for Basic Science in an Era of Short-Term Thinking

A Longtime Neuroscience Funder Pivots to Giving the Public a Voice in Research

Who’s Backing Archaeological Research? Here are Five Funders Digging Up the Past

A Public-Private Cancer Funder Backs Team Science and Targets Inequities in Care and Outcomes

A Family Foundation’s Refreshingly Accessible Approach to Funding Research and Education

How CZI’s Tech Team Builds New Tools to Unlock Advances in Biomedical Research

Can Philanthropy and Government Work Together to Drive Socially Responsible Tech?

How the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Is Working to Ensure Equitable Access to Care

How Two Bioscience Funding Giants are Partnering to Advance Synthetic Biology Research

The Biggest XPRIZE Yet Seeks Therapies that Roll Back the Depredations of Aging

A Major Bequest Finally Puts the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence on Solid Financial Ground

Paul Allen’s Philanthropic Legacy Continues with Funding for a Brand-New Field of Health Research

Starting With a Big Boost for Rare Disease Research, This Couple Are Ramping Up Their Giving

After Nearly a Century Funding Science, the Sloan Foundation Is Searching for Answers Near and Far

Why This Texas Billionaire Is Giving Big for Biodiversity Science in the Lone Star State

As It Shifts Strategies, the Kavli Foundation’s Zeroing in on How Climate Change Affects the Brain

A Local Foundation, a Little-Known College, and a Potential HIV and Cancer Breakthrough

AI for the Planet: How One of the World’s Biggest Tech Firms Is Backing AI-Powered Climate Science

Big Changes Underway at Kavli, Starting With a Program to Aid Scholars Escaping Global Strife

A Big Gift to UC San Diego is the Latest Philanthropic Push to Better Understand Psychedelics

Moved by a Schizophrenia Diagnosis, This Family Is Channeling Millions Toward Mental Health

AI Is Suddenly Everywhere, but Philanthropy Has Been Involved for Years. Here Are the Top Funders

Save the Bees, Bats and Butterflies: How Rotary International Is Making Pollinators a Priority

Type 1 Diabetes Is an Overlooked Global Threat. This Health Funder Has Made it a Top Priority

A Philanthropic Push to Diversify the Ranks of Researchers in Economics and Other Social Sciences

The Schmidt Ocean Institute Cracks the Champagne on One of the World’s Largest Research Vessels

Filed Under: IP Articles Tagged With: Front Page - More Article, Front Page Most Recent, FrontPageMore, Health, Public Health & Wellness, Science Research, Social Justice, Women & Girls

Primary Sidebar

Find A Grant Square Banner

Newsletter

Donor Advisory Center Banner
Consultants Directory Banner

Philanthropy Jobs

Check out our Philanthropy Jobs Center or click a job listing for more information.

Footer

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Facebook

Quick Links

About Us
Contact Us
Consultants Directory
FAQ & Help
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy

Become a Subscriber

Individual Subscriptions ▶︎
Multi-User Subscriptions ▶︎

© 2024 - Inside Philanthropy