Faculty Recruitment, Retention, and Representation in Leadership: An Evidence-Based Guide to Best Practices for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion from the Council of Residency Directors in Emergency Medicine.

Abstract

Improving the recruitment, retention, and leadership advancement of faculty who are under-represented in medicine is a priority at many academic institutions to ensure excellence in patient care, research, and health equity. Here we provide a critical review of the literature and offer evidence-based guidelines for faculty recruitment, retention, and representation in leadership. Recommendations for recruitment include targeted recruitment to expand the candidate pool with diverse candidates, holistic review of applications, and incentivizing stakeholders for success with diversity efforts. Retention efforts should establish a culture of inclusivity, promote faculty development, and evaluate for biases in the promotion and tenure process. We believe this guide will be valuable for all leaders and faculty members seeking to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion in their institutions.

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Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.5811/westjem.2021.8.53754

Publication Info

Davenport, Dayle, Al'ai Alvarez, Sreeja Natesan, Martina T Caldwell, Moises Gallegos, Adaira Landry, Melissa Parsons, Michael Gottlieb, et al. (2022). Faculty Recruitment, Retention, and Representation in Leadership: An Evidence-Based Guide to Best Practices for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion from the Council of Residency Directors in Emergency Medicine. The western journal of emergency medicine, 23(1). pp. 62–71. 10.5811/westjem.2021.8.53754 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28586.

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Scholars@Duke

Natesan

Sreeja M Natesan

Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine

Dr. Sree Natesan is an Associate Professor and Associate Program Director in the Duke University Department of Emergency Medicine. She is committed to the advancement of education, clinical teaching/feedback, and diversity, equity & inclusion (DEI). 

Regarding advancing medical education and fostering inclusive learning environments: She has had a broad clinical and research training including ACEP Teaching Fellowship, Academic Life in Emergency Medicine Faculty Incubator Program, AAMC Medical Education Research Certificate Program, Duke Educational Skills Longitudinal Mentorship Program, Duke Academy for Health Professions Education and Academic Development (AHEAD) Certificate Program, among others. She has shown herself a leader in medical education, having been awarded the CORD Junior Faculty Award, ACEP Junior Faculty Teacher Award, CORD Academy Scholar Award for Teaching and Evaluation. She is a leader on various national committees for MedEd including Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Director (CORD) Education Committee, co-Chair of the CORD Best Practices Subcommittee, Chair of CORD Academy for Scholarship Research Pillar.  Dr. Sree Natesan also serves as Chief Academic Officer for Academic Life in EM (ALiEM) Faculty Incubator Program, an international faculty development program. She is co-founder and director of the Duke GME Medical Education Leadership Track (MELT), a longitudinal resident/fellow-as-teachers program across all GME specialties, which has graduated over 150 trainees and fellows since 2018. She is also the Duke GME co-chair for the Professional Development Committee to help provide resources to all training programs at Duke. 

Regarding advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion within MedEd:  She serves as co-founder and co-chair of Duke EM Justice Equity Diversity & Inclusion (JEDI) as well as on national committees for advancing Medical Education and DEI. She is Vice Chair for the CORD DEI committee (rising Chair for 2024) and is the current secretary for SAEM ADIEM. She has helped lead institutional and national conferences on holistic review for resident recruitment, implicit bias, and upstander training against microaggression.  She has been the invited speaker within Duke, as well as speaking nationally at CORD and SAEM. She has helped to create the CORD DEI track for the CORD Academic Assembly as well as the virtual conference to help EM programs grow the diversity of their programs and create inclusive training spaces.  She is actively involved in community outreach, mentorship, and pipeline/pathline programs such as HPREP.

Her primary research interest and expertise is in clinical teaching and feedback by incorporating innovative novel strategies in the Emergency Department (ED) as well as advancing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. 


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