Table 4.
Covariate | Estimate | Adjusted P value |
---|---|---|
Mentor gender | 0.73 | |
Male | 0.15 | |
Female | — | |
Mentee–mentor gender match | 0.53 | |
Concordant | — | |
Discordant | −0.26 | |
Number of designated K award mentors | 0.90 | |
1 | — | |
2+ | −0.05 | |
Collegial mentor–mentee relationship | <.001 | |
Mostly or somewhat more collegial | — | |
Mostly and somewhat more student–teacher or neither | −1.72 | |
Frequency of communication between mentor–mentee | 0.03 | |
At least once a week | — | |
Less than once a week | −0.85 | |
Monthly hours meeting one-on-one with mentors (1-unit increase in square-root of hour)‡ |
0.90 | <.001 |
Mentor behavior scale (1-unit increase) | 0.29 | <.001 |
Mentor prestige scale (1-unit increase) | 0.38 | <.001 |
Extent of mentoring in various mentoring roles scale (1-unit increase) |
0.37 | <.001 |
Adjusted for the recipient (mentee) characteristics of gender, race (white, Asian, or underrepresented in medicine minority), degree (MD, MD/PhD, or non-MD), marital status (single, married, or divorced/widowed), parental status (yes or no), and specialty(women/children/family specialties, hospital based, surgical, medical, non-MD, basic sciences); for whether the recipient’s work was laboratory based (lab based or other); for whether the recipient spoke English as a native language (yes or no); and for the K award type (K08 or K23), year of K award (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009), and institutional NIH funding tier (first, second, third, or fourth).
K08 and K23 awards are National Institutes of Health career development awards that provide the recipient with salary support, structured mentoring, and protected research and training time.
Total hours was highly skewed toward higher values, and the square-root transformation was applied to normalize the distribution.