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住院医师评审委员会-外科(RRC-S)关于普通外科住院医师手术量的简短通讯。

Brief communication of the Residency Review Committee-Surgery (RRC-S) on residents' surgical volume in general surgery.

作者信息

Bland Kirby I, Stoll Doris A, Richardson J David, Britt L D

出版信息

Am J Surg. 2005 Sep;190(3):345-50. doi: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2005.06.036.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The Residency Review Committee-Surgery (RRC--S), 1 of 10 surgical specialties of the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has monitored the surgical volume of all general surgical residents closely. As a consequence of the reduction of duty hours with the limitation of an 80-hour work-week (averaged over 4 weeks), we were interested in the impact of these restrictions on surgical (volume) experience since its first year of implementation (2003--2004). Therefore, we evaluated the surgical volume of general surgical services since the implementation of the ACGME duty-hour restrictions and compared this volume with that of previous years without these duty limits.

METHODS

The Biostatistical Management Section of the ACGME implemented prospective analysis of categorized data for total surgical procedures and Chief Resident cases. The study interval included all resident surgical procedures completed from 1997 to 2004. We were interested particularly in evaluating trends and outcomes after the first year of successful full compliance of the 80-hour work week. Specific evaluations included the impact on surgical programs for total major procedures and Chief Resident cases requisite for application to the American Board of Surgery.

RESULTS

The average number of total major procedures for both resident and program averages were noted to increase steadily through the academic years of evaluation (1997--2001). A sharp decrease was evident in the total major procedures for the academic year 2001--2002 that relates to a correction of the biostatistical database implemented by the ACGME to correct a system conversion that began in the academic year 2001--2002. Despite significant changes to the system data mappings, beginning in the academic year 2001, this reduction is explained by the total counted surgeries as major that were eliminated in a revised counting methodology. It was evident on evaluation of the average (of averages) for major surgical procedures per resident (per program) in academic years 1997 to 2004 that the number of procedures was not statistically different in the academic years evaluated when compared with the year for implementation of duty-hour standards (2003--2004). Data analysis further indicates that the average procedures (per resident) performed as Chief Resident in general surgery remained stable from 1997 to 2004; the use of tiered t tests comparing Chief Resident averages (per program) for the academic years 2002--2003 versus 2003--2004 indicated that data remained consistent and confirmed no statistical variance in volumes during this interval (P=0.43). Because some general surgery programs have exceptions for duty-hour requirements (n=15) to allow an 88-hour week averaged over 4 weeks, these differences were of interest to evaluate programs with and without these duty-hour exceptions. Preliminary data with these limited parameters of evaluation suggest no detrimental outcomes related to the duty-hour restrictions for total major procedures per resident or for surgical procedures as Chief Residents for programs with and without these approved exceptions.

CONCLUSIONS

RRCs that evaluate general surgery and surgical specialties have responded aggressively and professionally to implement the duty-hour standards per the ACGME. This brief report should be considered an interim communication to evaluate the surgical experience impact for programs currently under the restriction of duty-hour limits. The data provided in the first year of evaluation since the implementation of the 80-hour work-week restriction policy suggest that there has been no significant change in the overall surgical experience for major procedures (per resident), nor has there been a negative impact on Chief Resident surgical experience. A continuum of the prospective evaluation process is required by the RRC-S and other surgical specialties to ensure that requisite surgical volume is maintained throughout the entire 5 years of clinical surgery.

摘要

背景

毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)的10个外科专业之一的住院医师评审委员会 - 外科(RRC - S)密切监测所有普通外科住院医师的手术量。由于将工作时长限制为每周80小时(4周平均)导致工作时长减少,自该政策实施的第一年(2003 - 2004年)起,我们便对这些限制对外科手术(量)经验的影响感兴趣。因此,我们评估了自ACGME工作时长限制实施以来普通外科服务的手术量,并将其与此前无这些工作时长限制年份的手术量进行比较。

方法

ACGME的生物统计学管理部门对分类数据进行前瞻性分析,内容涉及手术总例数和总住院医师负责的病例。研究区间涵盖了1997年至2004年完成的所有住院医师手术。我们尤其关注在成功全面遵守80小时工作周政策的第一年之后的趋势和结果。具体评估包括对申请美国外科委员会所需的主要手术总量和总住院医师病例的外科项目的影响。

结果

在评估的学年(1997 - 2001年)中,住院医师和项目平均的主要手术总量平均数稳步增加。2001 - 2002学年主要手术总量明显下降,这与ACGME对生物统计学数据库进行校正有关,目的是纠正始于2001 - 2002学年的系统转换。尽管从2001学年开始系统数据映射发生了重大变化,但这种下降是由于在修订的计数方法中被排除的被计为主要手术的总手术例数所致。对1997年至2004学年每位住院医师(每个项目)的主要外科手术平均(平均值)进行评估时发现,与实施工作时长标准的年份(2003 - 2004年)相比,所评估学年的手术例数在统计学上没有差异。数据分析进一步表明,1997年至2004年普通外科总住院医师执行的平均手术例数保持稳定;使用分层t检验比较2002 - 2003学年与2003 - 2004学年总住院医师(每个项目)的平均值表明,在此期间数据保持一致且确认手术量无统计学差异(P = 0.43)。由于一些普通外科项目对工作时长要求有例外情况(n = 15),允许4周平均每周工作88小时,因此评估有和没有这些工作时长例外情况的项目之间的差异很有意义。这些有限评估参数的初步数据表明,对于有和没有这些批准例外情况的项目,每位住院医师的主要手术总量或总住院医师手术量方面,工作时长限制均未产生有害结果。

结论

评估普通外科和外科专业的RRC积极且专业地响应了ACGME实施的工作时长标准。本简要报告应被视为一份临时沟通文件,用于评估当前受工作时长限制的项目的外科手术经验影响。自实施80小时工作周限制政策以来的第一年评估中提供的数据表明,主要手术(每位住院医师)的总体外科手术经验没有显著变化,对总住院医师的外科手术经验也没有负面影响。RRC - S和其他外科专业需要持续进行前瞻性评估过程,以确保在整个5年的临床外科实习期间维持所需的手术量。

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