TY - JOUR
T1 - NCI designated cancer center funding not influenced by organizational structure
AU - Wolfe, Margaret E.
AU - Yagoda, Daniel
AU - Thurman, Paul W.
AU - Luna, Jorge M.
AU - Figg, William Douglas
N1 - Funding Information:
The 2005–2007 NCI funding for each center was selected as the best proxy for research productivity at the cancer centers. As Joiner and Wormsley note, other ways to determine the impact of a center’s research activities such as the national and international recognition of its faculty and the number of patents or amount of royalties are not standard across institutions and are not always available to the public.5They also suggest that “revenues from sponsored research funding do provide a common currency for comparison” when they are normalized to account for differing sizes of the organizations.5 Annual NCI funding data were collected from staff at the Office of Budget and Finance at NCI. The figures represent all grant funding that was awarded to the cancer centers during this period, including research grants (R series), career development awards (K series), research training and fellowships (T and F series), and center grants (P series).
PY - 2009/5/15
Y1 - 2009/5/15
N2 - Background: National Cancer Institutes (NCI) designated cancer centers use one of three organizational structures. The hypothesis of this study is that there are differences in the amount of annual NCI funding per faculty member based on a cancer center's organizational structure. The study also considers the impact of secondary factors (i.e., the existence of a clinical program, the region and the size of the city in which the cancer center is located) on funding and the number of Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigators at each cancer center. Results: Of the 63 cancer centers, 44 use a matrix structure, 16 have a freestanding structure, and three have a Department of Oncology structure. Kruskal-Wallis tests reveal no statistically significant differences in the amount of funding per faculty member or the number of HHMI investigators between centers with a matrix, freestanding or Department of Oncology structure. Methods: Online research and telephone interviews with each cancer center were used to gather information, including: organizational structure, the presence of a clinical program, the number of faculty members, and the number of Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigators. Statistical tests were used to assess the impact which organizational structure has on the amount of funding per faculty member and number of HHMI investigators. Conclusion: While the results seem to suggest that the organizational structure of a given cancer center does not impact the amount of NCI funding or number of HHMI investigators which it attracts, the existence of this relationship is likely masked by the small sample size in this study. Further studies may be appropriate to examine the effect organizational structure has on other measurements which are relevant to cancer centers, such as quality and quantity of research produced.
AB - Background: National Cancer Institutes (NCI) designated cancer centers use one of three organizational structures. The hypothesis of this study is that there are differences in the amount of annual NCI funding per faculty member based on a cancer center's organizational structure. The study also considers the impact of secondary factors (i.e., the existence of a clinical program, the region and the size of the city in which the cancer center is located) on funding and the number of Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigators at each cancer center. Results: Of the 63 cancer centers, 44 use a matrix structure, 16 have a freestanding structure, and three have a Department of Oncology structure. Kruskal-Wallis tests reveal no statistically significant differences in the amount of funding per faculty member or the number of HHMI investigators between centers with a matrix, freestanding or Department of Oncology structure. Methods: Online research and telephone interviews with each cancer center were used to gather information, including: organizational structure, the presence of a clinical program, the number of faculty members, and the number of Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigators. Statistical tests were used to assess the impact which organizational structure has on the amount of funding per faculty member and number of HHMI investigators. Conclusion: While the results seem to suggest that the organizational structure of a given cancer center does not impact the amount of NCI funding or number of HHMI investigators which it attracts, the existence of this relationship is likely masked by the small sample size in this study. Further studies may be appropriate to examine the effect organizational structure has on other measurements which are relevant to cancer centers, such as quality and quantity of research produced.
KW - Cancer center
KW - Organizational structure
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=68049131429&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4161/cbt.8.10.8120
DO - 10.4161/cbt.8.10.8120
M3 - Article
C2 - 19270497
AN - SCOPUS:68049131429
SN - 1538-4047
VL - 8
SP - 869
EP - 873
JO - Cancer Biology and Therapy
JF - Cancer Biology and Therapy
IS - 10
ER -