Houston, Texas From the Department of Plastic Surgery, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2012 Oct;130(4):550e-557e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e318262f14a.
Despite advances in surgical training, microsurgery is still based on an apprenticeship model. To evaluate skill acquisition and apply targeted feedback to improve their training model, the authors applied the Structured Assessment of Microsurgery Skills to the training of microsurgical fellows. They hypothesized that subjects would demonstrate measurable improvement in performance throughout the study period and consistently across evaluators.
Seven fellows were evaluated during 118 microsurgical cases by 16 evaluators over three 1-month evaluation periods in 1 year (2010 to 2011). Evaluators used the Structured Assessment of Microsurgery Skills questionnaire, which measures dexterity, visuospatial ability, operative flow, and judgment. To validate the data, microsurgical anastomoses in rodents performed by the fellows in a laboratory at the beginning and end of the study period were evaluated by five blinded plastic surgeons using the same questionnaire. Primary outcomes were change in scores between evaluation periods and interevaluator reliability.
Between the first two evaluation periods, all skill areas and overall performance improved significantly. Between the second two periods, most skill areas improved, but only a few improved significantly. Operative errors decreased significantly between the first and subsequent periods (81 versus 36; p < 0.05). In the laboratory study, all skills were significantly (p < 0.05) or marginally (0.05 ≤ p < 0.10) improved between time points. The overall interevaluator reliability of the questionnaire was acceptable (α = 0.67).
The Structured Assessment of Microsurgery Skills questionnaire is a valid instrument for assessing microsurgical skill, providing individualized feedback with acceptable interevaluator reliability. Use of the questionnaire is anticipated to enhance microsurgical training.
尽管外科培训取得了进步,但显微外科仍然基于学徒模式。为了评估技能的获得情况,并应用有针对性的反馈来改进培训模式,作者将显微外科技能结构化评估应用于显微外科住院医师的培训中。他们假设研究对象在整个研究期间和评估者之间都能表现出可衡量的技能提升。
在 1 年(2010 年至 2011 年)的 3 个 1 个月的评估期内,7 名住院医师在 118 例显微外科手术中接受了 16 名评估者的评估。评估者使用了显微外科技能结构化评估问卷,该问卷衡量了灵巧性、空间视觉能力、手术流程和判断力。为了验证数据,研究开始和结束时,住院医师在实验室进行的啮齿动物显微吻合术由 5 名盲法整形外科医生使用相同的问卷进行评估。主要结果是评估期之间的分数变化和评估者之间的可靠性。
在头两个评估期之间,所有技能领域和整体表现都显著提高。在第二和第三个评估期之间,大多数技能领域都有所提高,但只有少数几个显著提高。手术错误在第一个和后续期间显著减少(81 比 36;p < 0.05)。在实验室研究中,所有技能在时间点之间都有显著(p < 0.05)或略有(0.05 ≤ p < 0.10)的提高。问卷的整体评估者之间的可靠性是可以接受的(α = 0.67)。
显微外科技能结构化评估问卷是一种评估显微外科技能的有效工具,提供了具有可接受的评估者之间可靠性的个性化反馈。预计使用问卷将增强显微外科培训。