TY - JOUR T1 - Expanding Family Medicine Scholarship to All Faculty: The Minnesota Model for Harmonizing Clinical Care, Education, and Research Missions JF - The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine JO - J Am Board Fam Med SP - 1055 LP - 1065 DO - 10.3122/jabfm.2021.05.210035 VL - 34 IS - 5 AU - Jerica M. Berge AU - Charles Peek AU - James T. Pacala AU - Patricia Adam AU - Shailendra Prasad AU - Deborah Finstead AU - Denise Windenburg AU - Jill Bengtson AU - Katie A. Loth AU - Michele L. Allen AU - Angela Buffington Y1 - 2021/09/01 UR - http://www.jabfm.org/content/34/5/1055.abstract N2 - Background: The Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the University of Minnesota engaged in a 5-year transformation to expand research and scholarship opportunities to all faculty. A harmonization framework was used to integrate the 3 missions of clinical care, education, and research to ensure that research and scholarship were an ongoing focus of the department.Methods: The key elements of our transformation included as follows: (1) a general culture of inquiry, (2) harmonized leadership, (3) training and mentoring, and (4) infrastructure and resources. Components of each of these elements were intentionally instituted simultaneously and iteratively across the 5 years to provide robust and sustainable research and scholarship opportunities for all faculty.Results: Outputs and outcomes of the harmonized transformation indicated that clinical and research faculty publications increased, and the percentage of clinical faculty trained in research and scholarship skills increased across the 5 years.Conclusions: Important lessons learned during the harmonized transformation included the following: (1) key elements of the transformation need to be balanced as an ensemble, (2) cultural and organizational shifts take concerted effort and time, (3) embrace iteration: allow “bumps in the road” to propel the work forward, (4) transformation is financially feasible, (5) career research faculty can mutually benefit from clinical faculty engaging in scholarship, and (6) honor skepticism or disinterest and let people cultivate enthusiasm for research and scholarship rather than being forced. ER -