4.7 Article

Perspectives of Zambian Clinical Oncology Trainees in the MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program (MOZART)

Journal

ONCOLOGIST
Volume 27, Issue 10, Pages E804-E810

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/oncolo/oyac110

Keywords

clinical research; training program; virtual; oncology; international; Africa

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health [P30 CA016672]
  2. Derek Harwood-Nash International Education Scholar Grant through the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA)
  3. MD Anderson Cancer Center Department of Radiation Oncology Strategic Initiatives (ROSI) grant

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This article discusses the participant perspectives of the MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program (MOZART) and provides valuable insights for the implementation of similar programs.
Background African countries are underrepresented in cancer research, partly because of a lack of structured curricula on clinical research during medical education. To address this need, the MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program (MOZART) was developed jointly by MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDA) and the Cancer Diseases Hospital in Zambia (CDH) for Zambian clinical oncology trainees. We explored participant perspectives to provide insight for implementation of similar efforts. Materials and Methods The MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program consisted of weekly virtual lectures and support of Zambian-led research protocols through longitudinal mentorship groups that included CDH faculty and MDA peer and faculty mentors. Participants were contacted via email to take part in semi-structured interviews, which were conducted via teleconference and audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded. Emergent themes were extracted and are presented with representative verbatim quotations. Results Thirteen of the 14 (93%) trainees were interviewed. Emergent themes included (1) participants having diverse educational backgrounds but limited exposure to clinical research, (2) importance of cancer research specific to a resource-constrained setting, (3) complementary roles of peer mentors and local and international faculty mentors, (4) positive impact on clinical research skills but importance of a longitudinal program and early exposure to clinical research, and (5) challenges with executing research protocols. Conclusion To our knowledge, this is the first qualitative study of African clinical oncology trainees participating in a virtual clinical research training program. The lessons learned from semi-structured interviews with participants in MOZART provided valuable insights that can inform the development of similar clinical research training efforts and scale-up. African countries are underrepresented in cancer research, partly because of a lack of structured curricula on clinical research during medical education. To address this need, the MOZART program for Zambian clinical oncology trainees was developed jointly by the MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDA) and the Cancer Diseases Hospital in Zambia (CDH). This article explores participant perspectives to provide insight for implementation of similar programs.

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