Webber Eric M, Ronson Ashley R, Gorman Lisa J, Taber Sarah A, Harris Kenneth A
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Surgery, University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Surg Educ. 2016 May-Jun;73(3):496-503. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2015.12.002. Epub 2016 Jan 28.
Similar to other countries, the practice of General Surgery in Canada has undergone significant evolution over the past 30 years without major changes to the training model. There is growing concern that current General Surgery residency training does not provide the skills required to practice the breadth of General Surgery in all Canadian communities and practice settings.
Led by a national Task Force on the Future of General Surgery, this project aimed to develop recommendations on the optimal configuration of General Surgery training in Canada. A series of 4 evidence-based sub-studies and a national survey were launched to inform these recommendations.
Generalized findings from the multiple methods of the project speak to the complexity of the current practice of General Surgery: (1) General surgeons have very different practice patterns depending on the location of practice; (2) General Surgery training offers strong preparation for overall clinical competence; (3) Subspecialized training is a new reality for today's general surgeons; and (4) Generation of the report and recommendations for the future of General Surgery. A total of 4 key recommendations were developed to optimize General Surgery for the 21st century.
This project demonstrated that a high variability of practice dependent on location contrasts with the principles of implementing the same objectives of training for all General Surgery graduates. The overall results of the project have prompted the Royal College to review the training requirements and consider a more "fit for purpose" training scheme, thus ensuring that General Surgery residency training programs would optimally prepare residents for a broad range of practice settings and locations across Canada.
与其他国家类似,加拿大普通外科的实践在过去30年中经历了重大演变,但培训模式没有重大变化。人们越来越担心,目前的普通外科住院医师培训无法提供在加拿大所有社区和实践环境中开展广泛普通外科实践所需的技能。
在普通外科未来全国特别工作组的领导下,该项目旨在就加拿大普通外科培训的最佳配置提出建议。开展了一系列4项基于证据的子研究和一项全国性调查,以为这些建议提供信息。
该项目多种方法得出的一般性发现表明了当前普通外科实践的复杂性:(1)普通外科医生的实践模式因执业地点而异;(2)普通外科培训为整体临床能力提供了有力的准备;(3)专科培训是当今普通外科医生面临的新现实;(4)生成了关于普通外科未来的报告和建议。共制定了4项关键建议,以优化21世纪的普通外科。
该项目表明,实践的高度变异性取决于地点,这与为所有普通外科毕业生实施相同培训目标的原则形成对比。该项目的总体结果促使皇家学院审查培训要求,并考虑一种更“符合目的”的培训方案,从而确保普通外科住院医师培训项目能让住院医师为加拿大各地广泛的实践环境和地点做好最佳准备。