AGA Editorial Fellowship: Three lasting lessons
Mentorship
My first development was as a direct mentee under the leadership of the two editors in chief Richard Peek, MD, and Douglas Corley, MD, and associate editor John Inadomi, MD. In this role, I reviewed submitted manuscripts regarding outcome data of oncologic studies in the fields of colon, esophageal, and gastric cancer. I served as a reviewer for submitted manuscripts and discussed the impact, novelty, and decision for publication with the Board of Editors. In our weekly meetings, the associate editors discussed manuscripts that needed further review prior to acceptance, revision, or rejection. A few themes underpinned the discussion of these manuscripts:
- Is this science reproducible and is there scientific rigor for study design, validity, and analysis?
- How does this manuscript add to the current state of the literature?
- What is the trajectory of this research field?
- How will this manuscript lead to breakthroughs in this field?
- Are the advancements in this manuscript likely to lead to paradigm shifts in the field in its approach, design, or findings?
I also was fortunate to meet leaders in the field, including working daily in person with multiple members of the Board of Editors at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn., as well as visiting professors, including Dr. Corley, Linda Rabeneck, MD, and T. Jake Liang, MD, who not only spoke on their scientific inquiries but also about their transitional path from gastroenterology fellows to pioneers in their respective fields. From these lessons, I have learned the scientific rigor of manuscript review for Gastroenterology and how to approach modern challenges in our field to directly improve patient care.
