Apramian Tavis, Cristancho Sayra, Watling Chris, Ott Michael, Lingard Lorelei
Centre for Education Research & Innovation, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, London, Ontario, Canada.
Centre for Education Research & Innovation, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, London, Ontario, Canada.
J Surg Educ. 2016 Mar-Apr;73(2):339-47. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2015.10.016. Epub 2015 Dec 15.
Clinical research increasingly acknowledges the existence of significant procedural variation in surgical practice. This study explored surgeons' perspectives regarding the influence of intersurgeon procedural variation on the teaching and learning of surgical residents.
This qualitative study used a grounded theory-based analysis of observational and interview data. Observational data were collected in 3 tertiary care teaching hospitals in Ontario, Canada. Semistructured interviews explored potential procedural variations arising during the observations and prompts from an iteratively refined guide. Ongoing data analysis refined the theoretical framework and informed data collection strategies, as prescribed by the iterative nature of grounded theory research.
Our sample included 99 hours of observation across 45 cases with 14 surgeons. Semistructured, audio-recorded interviews (n = 14) occurred immediately following observational periods.
Surgeons endorsed the use of intersurgeon procedural variations to teach residents about adapting to the complexity of surgical practice and the norms of surgical culture. Surgeons suggested that residents' efforts to identify thresholds of principle and preference are crucial to professional development. Principles that emerged from the study included the following: (1) knowing what comes next, (2) choosing the right plane, (3) handling tissue appropriately, (4) recognizing the abnormal, and (5) making safe progress. Surgeons suggested that learning to follow these principles while maintaining key aspects of surgical culture, like autonomy and individuality, are important social processes in surgical education.
Acknowledging intersurgeon variation has important implications for curriculum development and workplace-based assessment in surgical education. Adapting to intersurgeon procedural variations may foster versatility in surgical residents. However, the existence of procedural variations and their active use in surgeons' teaching raises questions about the lack of attention to this form of complexity in current workplace-based assessment strategies. Failure to recognize the role of such variations may threaten the implementation of competency-based medical education in surgery.
临床研究越来越多地认识到外科手术实践中存在显著的程序差异。本研究探讨了外科医生对外科医生之间程序差异对外科住院医师教学与学习影响的看法。
这项定性研究采用基于扎根理论的方法对观察和访谈数据进行分析。观察数据收集于加拿大安大略省的3家三级护理教学医院。半结构化访谈探讨了观察期间出现的潜在程序差异以及来自反复完善的指南的提示。按照扎根理论研究的迭代性质,持续的数据分析完善了理论框架并为数据收集策略提供了信息。
我们的样本包括对14位外科医生的45例手术进行的99小时观察。观察期结束后立即进行了半结构化的录音访谈(n = 14)。
外科医生认可利用外科医生之间的程序差异来教导住院医师如何适应手术实践的复杂性和手术文化规范。外科医生表示,住院医师努力确定原则和偏好的阈值对其职业发展至关重要。该研究得出的原则包括:(1)知道接下来会发生什么,(2)选择正确的层面,(3)妥善处理组织,(4)识别异常情况,(5)安全推进。外科医生认为,在保持手术文化的关键方面(如自主性和个性)的同时学习遵循这些原则是外科教育中的重要社会过程。
认识到外科医生之间的差异对外科教育中的课程开发和基于工作场所的评估具有重要意义。适应外科医生之间的程序差异可能会培养外科住院医师的通用性。然而,程序差异的存在及其在外科医生教学中的积极应用引发了人们对当前基于工作场所的评估策略中对这种复杂性形式缺乏关注的质疑。未能认识到这种差异的作用可能会威胁到外科学科基于能力的医学教育的实施。