# Building Up a Biomedical Research Workforce Trial

**Authors:** Doris M. Rubio, Gretchen E. White, Audrey J. Murrell, Pearl Nielsen, Natalia E. Morone

PMC · DOI: 10.1017/cts.2025.10144 · Journal of Clinical and Translational Science · 2025-09-10

## TL;DR

A trial tested a 10-month intervention to improve the productivity and well-being of underrepresented researchers in biomedical science.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence that structured interventions can boost Psychological Capital in underrepresented biomedical researchers.

## Key findings

- Intervention participants showed higher self-efficacy, resilience, and optimism over three years.
- The intervention increased Psychological Capital compared to usual institutional support.
- Follow-up assessments showed sustained benefits up to three years post-intervention.

## Abstract

Scientific teams that are comprised of different types of researchers have higher research productivity, and there is a need for evidence-based methods to improve the biomedical research workforce. Building Up a Biomedical Research Workforce (Building Up) was a multi-center, cluster-randomized, unblinded controlled trial with one intervention arm and one control arm, conducted at 25 United States academic medical centers. The authors tested the hypothesis that participants from backgrounds underrepresented in science who are randomized to the intervention will have greater numbers of peer-reviewed publications and increased Psychological Capital, compared to the control group.

The study included a 10-month intervention period and follow-up assessments occurring one, two, and three years after the intervention began. The intervention arm received a 10-month intervention with monthly meetings, near-peer mentoring, networking opportunities, and grant- and scientific-writing coursework. Participants in the control arm experienced the usual forms of mentoring, networking, and coursework that their institutions provided.

Of the 220 participants who completed the pre-intervention assessment (98% of all enrolled participants), 71% completed the post-intervention assessment at year 1, 60% at year 2, and 66% at year 3. Individuals in the intervention arm had significantly higher levels of self-efficacy, resilience, and optimism in the three years following the start of the intervention, compared to the control arm.

This finding suggests that the Building Up intervention can increase participants’ Psychological Capital.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12529635/full.md

## References

42 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12529635/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12529635