Longo Walter E, Seashore John, Duffy Andrew, Udelsman Robert
Department of Surgery, Yale University, School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Am J Surg. 2009 Jun;197(6):774-8; discussion 779-80. doi: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2008.06.038. Epub 2009 Jan 29.
Attrition of general surgery residents is of continued concern in graduate medical education. It results in loss of morale and resources and often leaves programs scrambling to find replacement residents. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of attrition of categoric general surgery residents as well as the fate of those who left the general surgery training program among a defined cohort of categoric general surgery residents in a university hospital residency training program.
We retrospectively reviewed the files of all general surgery residents at the Yale University School of Medicine-Yale New Haven Hospital Surgery Program who began as categoric interns from July 1, 1986 to June 30, 2006. Ninety-nine residents were identified. Attrition of residents was divided into withdrawals (changed specialty or left graduate medical education), transfers (transferred to a different program in general surgery), and dismissals (dismissed from the program).
Among the 99 residents who began as categoric interns from 1986 to 2006, 66 of 99 (67%) were men. Thirty of 99 (30%) failed to complete the general surgery training program. Of these, 21 of 30 (70%) withdrew, 5 of 30 (17%) transferred, and 4 of 30 (13%) were dismissed. Attrition occurred before entering the third clinical year in 23 of 30 (77%). Two of 30 (7%) left graduate medical education. Thirteen of 21 (62%) who withdrew entered primary care or another nonsurgical specialty, whereas 7 of 21 (38%) matriculated into a surgical subspecialty. The attrition rate was 40% (12 of 30) since the academic year 2000. The overall annual attrition rate for the past 20 years was 6.7%.
Attrition in our general surgery training remains low. Most who leave remain in graduate medical education and transfer to a different specialty. The overwhelming majority leave before beginning their third clinical year. Although our 6.7% annual attrition rate remains favorable (national attrition rate in general surgery 5.8%), we must continue to analyze the root causes and solutions.
普通外科住院医师流失问题在毕业后医学教育中一直备受关注。这会导致士气和资源的损失,并且常常使项目忙于寻找替代住院医师。本研究的目的是评估一所大学医院住院医师培训项目中,普通外科分类住院医师的流失率,以及那些离开普通外科培训项目的人员的去向。
我们回顾性审查了耶鲁大学医学院 - 耶鲁纽黑文医院外科项目中,所有于1986年7月1日至2006年6月30日开始担任分类实习生的普通外科住院医师的档案。共识别出99名住院医师。住院医师的流失分为退出(改变专业或离开毕业后医学教育)、转科(转至普通外科的不同项目)和开除(被项目开除)。
在1986年至2006年开始担任分类实习生的99名住院医师中,99人中有66人(67%)为男性。99人中有30人(30%)未能完成普通外科培训项目。其中,30人中有21人(70%)退出,30人中有5人(17%)转科,30人中有4人(13%)被开除。30人中有23人(77%)在进入第三临床年之前流失。30人中有2人(7%)离开毕业后医学教育。退出的21人中有13人(62%)进入初级保健或其他非外科专业,而21人中有7人(38%)进入外科亚专业。自2000学年以来,流失率为40%(30人中有12人)。过去20年的总体年流失率为6.7%。
我们普通外科培训中的流失率仍然较低。大多数离开的人仍留在毕业后医学教育中,并转至不同专业。绝大多数人在开始第三临床年之前离开。尽管我们6.7%的年流失率仍然较好(普通外科的全国流失率为5.8%),但我们必须继续分析根本原因和解决方案。