Zaheer Salman, Pimentel Samuel D, Simmons Kristina D, Kuo Lindsay E, Datta Jashodeep, Williams Noel, Fraker Douglas L, Kelz Rachel R
*University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Philadelphia, PA †Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Department of Surgery, Center for Surgery and Health Economics, Philadelphia, PA ‡University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School, Department of Statistics, Philadelphia, PA.
Ann Surg. 2017 May;265(5):916-922. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000001878.
The aim of this study is to compare surgical outcomes of international medical graduates (IMGs) and United States medical graduates (USMGs).
IMGs represent 15% of practicing surgeons in the United States (US), and their training pathways often differ substantially from USMGs. To date, differences in the clinical outcomes between the 2 cohorts have not been examined.
Using a unique dataset linking AMA Physician Masterfile data with hospital discharge claims from Florida and New York (2008-2011), patients who underwent 1 of 32 general surgical operations were stratified by IMG and USMG surgeon status. Mortality, complications, and prolonged length of stay were compared between IMG and USMG surgeon status using optimal sparse network matching with balance.
We identified 972,718 operations performed by 4581 surgeons (72% USMG, 28% IMG). IMG and USMG surgeons differed significantly in demographic (age, gender) and baseline training (years of training, university affiliation of training hospital) characteristics. USMG surgeons performed complex procedures (13.7% vs 11.1%, P < 0.01) and practiced in urban settings (79.4% vs 75.6%, P < 0.01) more frequently, while IMG surgeons performed a higher volume of studied operations (50.7 ± 5.1 vs 57.8 ± 8.4, P < 0.01). In the matched cohort analysis of 396,810 patients treated by IMG and USMG surgeons, rates of mortality (USMG: 2.2%, IMG: 2.1%; P < 0.001), complications (USMG: 14.5%, IMG: 14.3%; P = 0.032), and prolonged length of stay (pLOS) (USMG: 22.7%, IMG: 22.8%; P = 0.352) were clinically equivalent.
Despite considerable differences in educational background, surgical training characteristics, and practice patterns, IMG and USMG-surgeons deliver equivalent surgical care to the patients whom they treat.
本研究旨在比较国际医学毕业生(IMG)和美国医学毕业生(USMG)的手术治疗效果。
IMG占美国执业外科医生的15%,他们的培训途径通常与USMG有很大差异。迄今为止,尚未对这两组人群的临床治疗效果差异进行研究。
利用一个独特的数据集,将美国医学协会医师主文件数据与佛罗里达州和纽约州(2008 - 2011年)的医院出院记录相链接,对接受32种普通外科手术之一的患者,按IMG和USMG外科医生身份进行分层。使用具有平衡性的最优稀疏网络匹配方法,比较IMG和USMG外科医生身份患者的死亡率、并发症发生率和住院时间延长情况。
我们识别出由4581名外科医生实施的972,718例手术(72%为USMG,28%为IMG)。IMG和USMG外科医生在人口统计学特征(年龄、性别)和基线培训特征(培训年限、培训医院的大学附属关系)方面存在显著差异。USMG外科医生更频繁地实施复杂手术(13.7%对11.1%,P < 0.01)且在城市环境中执业(79.4%对75.6%,P <