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editorial
. 2019 May 25;23(10):2889–2897. doi: 10.1007/s10461-019-02520-w

Table 2.

Outcomes of subset of R25 mentees

Publications (N = 40 mentees) N (% mentees)
 No articles 4 (10%)
 1–5 articles 19 (48%)
 6–10 articles 7 (18%)
 More than 10 articles 10 (25%)
Publications (N = 271 articles)a N (% articles)
 Mentees’ lead author articles 85 (31%)
 Mentees’ multi-authored articles 225 (83%)
Research Grants (mentee as P.I.) (N = 30 mentees)b N (% mentees)
 R01 5 (17%)
 R03/R21/R34 4 (13%)
 Other Grants (i.e., R15, R56, U01) 5 (17%)
 Total RPGs 14 (47%)
Training Grants (mentee as P.I.) (N = 30)b,c N (% mentees)
 Career awards 7 (23%)
 NRSA Ts, Fs 4 (13%)
 LRP 14 (47%)
 Total training awards 25 (83%)

Publication history: To measure publication productivity for each individual, the number of publications in each calendar year, two to five years after R25 completion, was recorded from the National Library of Medicine’s MEDLINE, according to modification of the method described by Mason et al. [24]. The Medline database was accessed (around Jan 2018) for each of the mentees. Publications were counted within each of the following categories by searching in the title or in the abstract: [1] directly-related HIV/behavioral publications (i.e., “HIV” appeared and behavior was described; [2] indirectly related HIV/behavioral publications (i.e., “HIV” did not appear but issues that might inform HIV-behavioral research did appear, such as risky behavior, minorities, nonHIV infectious diseases or assessment/methodology; [3] first-authored publications (i.e., mentee was first author); [4] collaborative publications (i.e., mentee was associated with at least two other co-authors)

NIH Research Grant Funding: Grant data was collected using the iSearch tool created by the NIH Office of Portfolio Analysis, which links unique person IDs to NIH grants

aArticles directly and indirectly related to HIV/behavior

bNot mutually exclusive category

cTraining awards may have occurred before or after R25