Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts2Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts3currently with the Department of Surgery, Connecticut Children's Medical Center, Hartford.
Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts4Goodman Surgical Education Center, Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California.
JAMA Surg. 2017 Apr 1;152(4):318-325. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2016.4619.
Surgical expertise demands technical and nontechnical skills. Traditionally, surgical trainees acquired these skills in the operating room; however, operative time for residents has decreased with duty hour restrictions. As in other professions, video analysis may help maximize the learning experience.
To develop and evaluate a postoperative video-based coaching intervention for residents.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this mixed methods analysis, 10 senior (postgraduate year 4 and 5) residents were videorecorded operating with an attending surgeon at an academic tertiary care hospital. Each video formed the basis of a 1-hour one-on-one coaching session conducted by the operative attending; although a coaching framework was provided, participants determined the specific content collaboratively. Teaching points were identified in the operating room and the video-based coaching sessions; iterative inductive coding, followed by thematic analysis, was performed.
Teaching points made in the operating room were compared with those in the video-based coaching sessions with respect to initiator, content, and teaching technique, adjusting for time.
Among 10 cases, surgeons made more teaching points per unit time (63.0 vs 102.7 per hour) while coaching. Teaching in the video-based coaching sessions was more resident centered; attendings were more inquisitive about residents' learning needs (3.30 vs 0.28, P = .04), and residents took more initiative to direct their education (27% [198 of 729 teaching points] vs 17% [331 of 1977 teaching points], P < .001). Surgeons also more frequently validated residents' experiences (8.40 vs 1.81, P < .01), and they tended to ask more questions to promote critical thinking (9.30 vs 3.32, P = .07) and set more learning goals (2.90 vs 0.28, P = .11). More complex topics, including intraoperative decision making (mean, 9.70 vs 2.77 instances per hour, P = .03) and failure to progress (mean, 1.20 vs 0.13 instances per hour, P = .04) were addressed, and they were more thoroughly developed and explored. Excerpts of dialogue are presented to illustrate these findings.
Video-based coaching is a novel and feasible modality for supplementing intraoperative learning. Objective evaluation demonstrates that video-based coaching may be particularly useful for teaching higher-level concepts, such as decision making, and for individualizing instruction and feedback to each resident.
外科专业知识需要技术和非技术技能。传统上,外科学员是在手术室中获得这些技能的;然而,由于工作时间限制,住院医师的手术时间减少了。与其他职业一样,视频分析可能有助于最大限度地提高学习体验。
为住院医师开发和评估一种基于术后视频的辅导干预措施。
设计、地点和参与者:在这项混合方法分析中,10 名高级(研究生第 4 年和第 5 年)住院医师在学术性三级护理医院与主治外科医生一起进行了录像手术。每个视频都构成了由手术主治医生进行的 1 小时一对一辅导课程的基础;尽管提供了辅导框架,但参与者共同确定了具体内容。在手术室和基于视频的辅导课程中确定了教学要点;进行了迭代的归纳编码,然后进行主题分析。
根据时间调整,比较了手术室和基于视频的辅导课程中的教学要点的发起者、内容和教学技术。
在 10 例病例中,外科医生在辅导过程中每单位时间提出的教学要点更多(每小时 63.0 个与 102.7 个)。基于视频的辅导课程中的教学更以学员为中心;主治医生更关注学员的学习需求(3.30 分与 0.28 分,P = .04),学员更主动地指导自己的教育(27%[198 个教学要点]与 17%[331 个教学要点],P < .001)。外科医生还更频繁地验证学员的经验(8.40 分与 1.81 分,P < .01),他们更倾向于提出问题以促进批判性思维(9.30 分与 3.32 分,P = .07)并设定更多的学习目标(2.90 分与 0.28 分,P = .11)。更复杂的主题,包括手术中的决策制定(平均 9.70 个与每小时 2.77 个实例,P = .03)和进展失败(平均 1.20 个与每小时 0.13 个实例,P = .04),都得到了处理,并且更深入地发展和探讨。对话摘录被呈现出来以说明这些发现。
基于视频的辅导是一种补充术中学习的新颖且可行的模式。客观评估表明,基于视频的辅导对于教授决策等更高级别的概念可能特别有用,并且可以根据每个住院医师的情况对指导和反馈进行个性化。