Longo Walter E, Cheadle William, Fink Aaron, Kozol Robert, DePalma Ralph, Rege Robert, Neumayer Leigh, Tarpley John, Tarpley Margaret, Joehl Ray, Miller Thomas A, Rosendale Douglas, Itani Kamal
Department of Surgery, Yale University, 330 Cedar St., LH 118, New Haven, CT 06510, USA.
Am J Surg. 2005 Nov;190(5):662-75. doi: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2005.07.001.
Veterans Administration (VA) medical centers have had a long history of providing medical care to those who have served their country. Over time, the VA has evolved into a facility that has had a major role in graduate medical education. In surgery, this had provided experience in the medical and surgical management of complex surgical disease involving the head and neck, chest, and gastrointestinal tract, and in the fields of surgical oncology, peripheral vascular disease, and the subspecialties of urology, orthopedics, and neurosurgery. The VA provides a venue for the attending physician and resident to work in concert to allow the resident to shoulder increasing accountability in decision-making and delivery of care in the outpatient arena, the operating room, and the intensive care unit. Medical students assigned to a VA hospital are afforded a great opportunity to be exposed to preoperative planning, discussions leading to informed consent for surgery, the actual operation, and postoperative care. Numerous opportunities at the VA are available for novice and experienced medical faculty members to develop and/or enhance skills and abilities in patient care, medical education, and research. In addition, the VA offers unique opportunities for academic physicians and other healthcare professionals to administer its many programs, thereby developing leadership skills and experience in the process. The VA is uniquely situated to design and conduct multicenter clinical trials. The most important aspect of this is the infrastructure provided by the VA Cooperative Studies Program. Of the four missions of the Department of Veterans Affairs, research and education is essential to provide quality, state of the art clinical care to the veteran. The National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) is an example of how outcomes based research can favorably impact on patient outcome. Looking across the horizon of information solutions available to surgeons, the options are limited. This is not the case for the Department of Veterans Affairs. With the congressionally mandated charge for the VA to compare its quality to private clinicians, the advent of the "Surgery Package" became possible. The VA will continue its leadership position in the healthcare arena if it can successfully address the challenges facing it.
退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗中心长期以来一直为那些为国效力的人提供医疗服务。随着时间的推移,退伍军人事务部已发展成为在研究生医学教育中发挥重要作用的机构。在外科领域,它提供了处理涉及头颈部、胸部和胃肠道的复杂外科疾病以及外科肿瘤学、周围血管疾病以及泌尿外科、骨科和神经外科等亚专业的医疗和手术管理经验。退伍军人事务部为主治医师和住院医师提供了一个协同工作的场所,使住院医师能够在门诊、手术室和重症监护病房的决策和护理提供方面承担越来越多的责任。被分配到退伍军人事务部医院的医学生有很好的机会接触术前规划、关于手术知情同意的讨论、实际手术以及术后护理。退伍军人事务部为新手和经验丰富的医学教员提供了许多机会,以发展和/或提高他们在患者护理、医学教育和研究方面的技能和能力。此外,退伍军人事务部为学术医师和其他医疗保健专业人员提供了独特的机会来管理其众多项目,从而在此过程中培养领导技能和经验。退伍军人事务部具有独特的条件来设计和开展多中心临床试验。其中最重要的是退伍军人事务部合作研究项目提供的基础设施。在退伍军人事务部的四项使命中,研究和教育对于为退伍军人提供高质量的、最先进的临床护理至关重要。国家外科质量改进计划(NSQIP)就是基于结果的研究如何能对患者预后产生积极影响的一个例子。纵观外科医生可用的信息解决方案,选择有限。但退伍军人事务部并非如此。由于国会要求退伍军人事务部将其质量与私人临床医生进行比较,“手术套餐”应运而生。如果退伍军人事务部能够成功应对所面临的挑战,它将继续在医疗保健领域占据领先地位。