Department of Surgery, Division of Acute Care Surgery, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012 Sep;73(3):599-604; discussion 604. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e318265f984.
Emergency general surgery (EGS) is increasingly being provided by academic trauma surgeons in an acute care surgery model. Our tertiary care hospital recently changed from a model where all staff surgeons (private, subspecialty academic, and trauma academic) were assigned EGS call to one in which an emergency surgery service (ESS), staffed by academic trauma faculty, cares for all EGS patients. In the previous model, many surgeries were "not covered" by residents because of work-hour restrictions, conflicting needs, or private surgeon preference. The ESS was separate from the trauma service. We hypothesize that by creating a separate ESS, residents can accumulate needed and concentrated operative experience in a well-supervised academic environment.
A prospectively accrued EGS database was retrospectively queried for the 18-month period: July 2010 to June 2011. The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) databases were queried for operative numbers for our residency program and for national resident data for 2 years before and after creating the ESS. The ACGME operative requirements were tabulated from online sources. ACGME requirements were compared with surgical cases performed.
During the 18-month period, 816 ESS operations were performed. Of these, 307 (38%) were laparoscopy. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy and appendectomy were most common (138 and 145, respectively) plus 24 additional laparoscopic surgeries. Each resident performed, on average, 34 basic laparoscopic cases during their 2-month rotation, which is 56% of their ACGME basic laparoscopic requirement. A diverse mixture of 70 other general surgical operations was recorded for the remaining 509 surgical cases, including reoperative surgery, complex laparoscopy, multispecialty procedures, and seldom-performed operations such as surgery for perforated ulcer disease. Before the ESS, the classes of 2008 and 2009 reported that only 48% and 50% of cases were performed at the main academic institution, respectively. This improved for the classes of 2010 and 2011 to 63% and 68%, respectively, after ESS creation.
An ESS rotation is becoming essential in large teaching hospitals by helping to fulfill ACGME requirements and by providing emergent general surgical skills an efficient and well-supervised academic environment. Movement toward concentrating EGS on a single service can enhance resident education and may decrease the need to supplement certain aspects of general surgery education with away rotations.
急诊普通外科(EGS)越来越多地由创伤外科医生在急性护理外科模式下提供。我们的三级保健医院最近从一个所有工作人员外科医生(私人、亚专业学术和创伤学术)都被分配 EGS 呼叫的模式转变为一个由学术创伤教师组成的紧急手术服务(ESS)来照顾所有 EGS 患者。在以前的模式中,由于工作时间限制、冲突需求或私人外科医生的偏好,许多手术“没有覆盖”住院医师。ESS 与创伤服务分开。我们假设,通过创建一个单独的 ESS,住院医师可以在一个有良好监督的学术环境中积累所需的集中手术经验。
前瞻性累积的 EGS 数据库在 18 个月的时间内进行了回顾性查询:2010 年 7 月至 2011 年 6 月。ACGME 数据库查询了我们住院医师项目的手术数量和创建 ESS 前 2 年的全国住院医师数据。从在线资源中列出了 ACGME 手术要求。将 ACGME 要求与进行的手术进行了比较。
在 18 个月期间,进行了 816 例 ESS 手术。其中 307 例(38%)为腹腔镜手术。腹腔镜胆囊切除术和阑尾切除术最为常见(分别为 138 例和 145 例),外加 24 例其他腹腔镜手术。每位住院医师在为期 2 个月的轮班期间平均进行 34 例基础腹腔镜手术,占其 ACGME 基础腹腔镜要求的 56%。其余 509 例手术记录了 70 种其他普通外科手术的多样化组合,包括再次手术、复杂腹腔镜手术、多专科手术以及很少进行的手术,如穿孔性溃疡病手术。在 ESS 之前,2008 年和 2009 年的班级报告说,只有 48%和 50%的病例分别在主要学术机构进行。这一数字在 ESS 成立后有所改善,2010 年和 2011 年的班级分别提高到 63%和 68%。
在大型教学医院中,ESS 轮转变得至关重要,它有助于满足 ACGME 的要求,并为住院医师提供紧急普通外科技能,同时在一个高效且有良好监督的学术环境中进行。将 EGS 集中在单一服务上的做法可以加强住院医师教育,并可能减少用外部轮转来补充普通外科教育某些方面的需要。