Monday, November 4, 2013

Postdocs or Data-Producing-Humanoids

(I wrote this article for "The Postdoc Press (Issue 3)", a proud publication from the MUSC Postdoctoral Association)

Postdoctoral researcher is not just a revered title; it is an opportunity to envision things that never existed before. The data produced by a Postdoc (PD) plays a crucial role directly or indirectly for the advancement of science and technology, understand disease conditions and its treatment, support the intellectual strength and infrastructure of institutions, increase the influx of grant support which in turn helps recruit more lab personnel, handle lab finances, publish papers that puts the entire lab in spotlight, and build alliances and intellectual bridges between institutions. While there are cases where a successful PD experience results in a lucrative career, there are several instances where PDs unwittingly become an ‘academic slave’. This article carefully scrutinizes what the definition of PD means in a real world, what more a PD have to do in addition to producing data, responsibilities of institutions, funding agencies and the nation to restore the significance of a PD career.

To begin with, the January 29 (2007) letter written by Dr. Norka Ruiz Bravo and Dr. Kathie L. Olsen proclaimed the definition of a PD as follows: “an individual who has received a doctoral degree (or equivalent) and is engaged in a temporary and defined period of mentored advanced training to enhance the professional skills and research independence needed to pursue his or her chosen career path”.

Now, a postmortem analysis. Gone are the days where the word temporary period used to mean 2 or 3 years, but now this number spikes to 5 or beyond. There are several occasions where a 5-year PD training was marked as the upper limit (for example, to obtain a K99/R00 grant), but NIH/NSF fails to openly state this. Because of this, several institutions (and PIs to some extent) exploit PDs as a ‘cheap labor’ to beef-up their infrastructure. These days it is becoming increasingly common to see PDs beyond 5 years. If a PD career is considered a training period, then NIH/NSF must openly declare in its definition what the maximum length of the training period should be. Carefully avoiding this will result in more ‘victim’ PDs.

Let’s inspect the phrase ‘enhance the professional skills and research independence’. In labs, it is expected of any PD to produce more data and there is nothing wrong with that. What is not right these days is a lot of PDs are trained ‘only’ to produce data and not to worry so much about the future of the data or even about themselves. These doctorates know to create things that never existed before, provide scientific reasoning to complex phenomenon, troubleshoot state-of-the-art machines and publish papers, but they passively accept their bondage to labs and lack requisite skills to take a quantum leap upward. In short, a Humanoid in disguise!

The professional skills that are required in the present era includes – but not limited to – research ethics, grant writing, teaching, speaking & writing, business and negotiation, lab management. Because crafting technical skills to produce more data was assigned the top priority of most labs today and activities that promote obtaining independent funding are usually restricted to reputed institutions and that too in few labs, PDs find little room to increase the breadth of professional skills or the depth of research independence.  The initiatives taken by Postdoctoral associations across the nation to care for their peers are quite laudable. Since these associations are run by volunteer doctorates whose fulltime job is to engage in research, a more organized approach involving PIs and the institutions that foster continuous learning, improve communication and networking skills could play a vital role to fill the paucity of professional skills that the PDs lack. It must be made clear that producing more data is not an indicator of possessing professional skills.

Somehow in this practical world, knowingly or unknowingly, the very basic definition of a PD meant differently to different institutions, and it is about time NIH and NSF come forward to do something before the damage gets worse. To begin with, PDs should be recognized with a status, an open assessment and evaluation, NIH-standardized minimum salary, benefits, and help transit to regular career positions after 5-years, etc. Whenever key decisions are taken at the national level, at least 100 PD representatives (not from the NPA) must sit at the table to give their inputs. Because more science funding is the real solution, the institution should stop underpaying PDs and should look at their elected officials and demand that science be better supported.

Critics, who once passionately conducted academic research for the love of knowledge, today discourage anyone pursuing a PD career because they feel the system is antiquated and failed to fulfill its purpose. They were partially right because some of the concerns PDs face in most institutions today did not happen overnight, but are present quite some time. Concerted efforts involving PIs, academic institutions (especially the Human Resources division), funding bodies, governments and current PDs to improve the overall PD experience is the need of the hour. Otherwise, the humanoids will engender more humanoids!