Division of Surgery, University of Adelaide, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Woodville, Australia.
Australian Safety and Efficacy Register of New Interventional Procedures - Surgical (ASERNIP-S), Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, North Adelaide, Australia.
Br J Surg. 2017 May;104(6):777-785. doi: 10.1002/bjs.10493. Epub 2017 Mar 13.
In addition to technical expertise, surgical competence requires effective non-technical skills to ensure patient safety and maintenance of standards. Recently the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons implemented a new Surgical Education and Training (SET) curriculum that incorporated non-technical skills considered essential for a competent surgeon. This study sought to compare the non-technical skills of experienced surgeons who completed their training before the introduction of SET with the non-technical skills of more recent trainees.
Surgical trainees and experienced surgeons undertook a simulated scenario designed to challenge their non-technical skills. Scenarios were video recorded and participants were assessed using the Non-Technical Skills for Surgeons (NOTSS) scoring system. Participants were divided into subgroups according to years of experience and their NOTSS scores were compared.
For most NOTSS elements, mean scores increased initially, peaking around the time of Fellowship, before decreasing roughly linearly over time. There was a significant downward trend in score with increasing years since being awarded Fellowship for six of the 12 NOTSS elements: considering options (score -0·015 units per year), implementing and reviewing decisions (-0·020 per year), establishing a shared understanding (-0·014 per year), setting and maintaining standards (-0·024 per year), supporting others (-0·031 per year) and coping with pressure (-0·015 per year).
The drop in NOTSS score was unexpected and highlights that even experienced surgeons are not immune to deficiencies in non-technical skills. Consideration should be given to continuing professional development programmes focusing on non-technical skills, regardless of the level of professional experience.
除了技术专长外,手术能力还需要有效的非技术技能,以确保患者安全和维持标准。最近,澳大利亚皇家外科医学院实施了新的外科教育和培训(SET)课程,其中纳入了被认为是合格外科医生必备的非技术技能。本研究旨在比较在引入 SET 之前接受培训的经验丰富的外科医生的非技术技能与最近受训者的非技术技能。
外科受训者和经验丰富的外科医生进行了模拟场景,以挑战他们的非技术技能。对场景进行了录像,并使用外科非技术技能(NOTSS)评分系统对参与者进行评估。参与者根据经验年限分为亚组,并比较其 NOTSS 评分。
对于大多数 NOTSS 要素,平均分数最初会增加,在获得奖学金后达到峰值,然后随着时间的推移大致呈线性下降。在 12 个 NOTSS 要素中的 6 个要素中,随着获得奖学金的年限的增加,分数呈明显下降趋势:考虑选择(每年减少 0.015 个单位),实施和审查决策(每年减少 0.020),建立共识(每年减少 0.014),设定和维持标准(每年减少 0.024),支持他人(每年减少 0.031)和应对压力(每年减少 0.015)。
NOTSS 分数的下降出乎意料,这表明即使是经验丰富的外科医生也不能免受非技术技能缺陷的影响。无论专业经验水平如何,都应考虑继续进行非技术技能的专业发展计划。