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Developing a culture of safety in biomedical research training
Authors:Michelle R. Bond  Alison E. Gammie  Jon R. Lorsch
Affiliation:University of California, Berkeley;aNational Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20895
Abstract:
The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) is committed to supporting the safety of the nation’s biomedical research and training environments. Institutional training grants affect many trainees and can have a broad influence across their parent institutions, making them good starting points for our initial efforts to promote the development and maintenance of robust cultures of safety at U.S. academic institutions. In this Perspective, we focus on laboratory safety, although many of the strategies we describe for improving laboratory safety are also applicable to other forms of safety including the prevention of harassment, intimidation, and discrimination. We frame the problem of laboratory safety using a number of recent examples of tragic accidents, highlight some of the lessons that have been learned from these and other events, discuss what NIGMS is doing to address problems related to laboratory safety, and outline steps that institutions can take to improve their safety cultures.

All new funding opportunity announcements (FOAs) for training programs supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) contain the expectation that the programs will promote “inclusive, safe and supportive scientific and training environments.” In this context, the word “safe” refers to several aspects of safety. First, we mean an environment free from harassment and intimidation, in which everyone participating is treated in a respectful and supportive manner, optimized for productive learning and research. We also mean that institutions should ensure that their campuses are as safe as possible so that individuals can focus on their studies and research. Finally, we mean safety in the laboratory and clinical spaces. In this Perspective, we focus on this last issue and describe some of the approaches NIGMS is taking to help the biomedical research community move toward an enhanced culture of safety in which core values and the behaviors of leadership, principal investigators (PIs), research staff, and trainees emphasize safety over competing goals.
Keywords:
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