How Clinician-Scientists Access and Mobilise Social Capital and Thus Contribute to the Professional Development of Their Colleagues in Their Networks

Publication date

2024

Authors

de Groot, EstherORCID 0000-0003-0388-385XISNI 0000000390236123
Brouwer, Jasperina
Baggen, Yvette
Moolenaar, Nienke
Kluijtmans, ManonORCID 0000-0001-6601-7639
Damoiseaux, RogerORCID 0000-0001-8052-0302ISNI 0000000390478042

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Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

Clinician-scientists, physicians who conduct research, may fulfil a bridging role in networks of health care researchers and practitioners. Within clinician-scientists' networks, knowledge sharing is thought to play a vital role in the continuing professional development of themselves and their colleagues. However, little is known about networks of clinician-scientists and how this impacts continuing professional development. Rooted in social capital theory, this study provides a mixed methods exploration of clinician-scientists' networks. Ego-level social network data were collected via semi-structured interviews on professional interactions about evidence-based practice with 15 clinician-scientists in the area of general practice and elderly care. Quantitative analysis revealed that professional networks of clinician-scientists varied in size, composition, and frequency of interactions depending on appointed research time and experience. Less experienced clinician-scientists interacted most frequently with other clinician-scientists while experienced clinician-scientist experienced more sporadically with clinicians. Clinician-scientists with more research time interacted more frequently with scientists and had a slightly larger professional network than those with less research time. The thematic qualitative analysis revealed different decision-making processes of clinician-scientists on mobilising their social capital and connecting to others in the network: (1) deliberate decision about initiating connections; (2) reactive behaviour without a decision; (3) ad-hoc decision. Clinician-scientists exchange knowledge to enhance their own continuing professional development mainly but also contribute to the professional development of clinicians, scientists, and other clinician-scientists.

Keywords

Professional networks, social capital, knowledge exchange, continuing professional development, Journal Article

Citation

de Groot, E, Brouwer, J, Baggen, Y, Moolenaar, N, Kluijtmans, M & Damoiseaux, R 2024, 'How Clinician-Scientists Access and Mobilise Social Capital and Thus Contribute to the Professional Development of Their Colleagues in Their Networks', Journal of CME, vol. 13, no. 1, 2421129. https://doi.org/10.1080/28338073.2024.2421129