Quick Jacob A, Kudav Vishal, Doty Jennifer, Crane Megan, Bukoski Alex D, Bennett Bethany J, Barnes Stephen L
Department of Surgery, University of Missouri, School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
Department of Surgery, University of Missouri, School of Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
J Surg Res. 2017 Oct;218:144-149. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2017.05.070.
Surgical resident ability to accurately evaluate one's own skill level is an important part of educational growth. We aimed to determine if differences exist between self and observer technical skill evaluation of surgical residents performing a single procedure.
We prospectively enrolled 14 categorical general surgery residents (six post-graduate year [PGY] 1-2, three PGY 3, and five PGY 4-5). Over a 6-month period, following each laparoscopic cholecystectomy, residents and seven faculty each completed the Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skills (OSATS). Spearman's coefficient was calculated for three groups: senior (PGY 4-5), PGY3, and junior (PGY 1-2). Rho (ρ) values greater than 0.8 were considered well correlated.
Of the 125 paired assessments (resident-faculty each evaluating the same case), 58 were completed for senior residents, 54 for PGY3 residents, and 13 for junior residents. Using the mean from all OSATS categories, trainee self-evaluations correlated well to faculty (senior ρ 0.97, PGY3 ρ 0.9, junior ρ 0.9). When specific OSATS categories were analyzed, junior residents exhibited poor correlation in categories of respect for tissue (ρ -0.5), instrument handling (ρ 0.71), operative flow (ρ 0.41), use of assistants (ρ 0.05), procedural knowledge (ρ 0.32), and overall comfort with the procedure (ρ 0.73). PGY3 residents lacked correlation in two OSATS categories, operative flow (ρ 0.7) and procedural knowledge (ρ 0.2). Senior resident self-evaluations exhibited strong correlations to observers in all areas.
Surgical residents improve technical skill self-awareness with progressive training. Less-experienced trainees have a tendency to over-or-underestimate technical skill.
外科住院医师准确评估自身技能水平的能力是教育成长的重要组成部分。我们旨在确定在对进行单一手术的外科住院医师的自我技术技能评估与观察者评估之间是否存在差异。
我们前瞻性地招募了14名普通外科住院医师(6名研究生一年级至二年级[PGY],3名PGY3,5名PGY4 - 5)。在6个月的时间里,每次腹腔镜胆囊切除术后,住院医师和7名教员分别完成技术技能客观结构化评估(OSATS)。对三组进行了Spearman系数计算:高年级组(PGY4 - 5)、PGY3组和低年级组(PGY1 - 2)。Rho(ρ)值大于0.8被认为相关性良好。
在125对评估(住院医师 - 教员各自评估同一病例)中,高年级住院医师完成了58对,PGY3住院医师完成了54对,低年级住院医师完成了13对。使用所有OSATS类别的平均值,学员自我评估与教员评估相关性良好(高年级组ρ0.97,PGY3组ρ0.9,低年级组ρ0.9)。当分析特定的OSATS类别时,低年级住院医师在组织尊重(ρ -0.5)、器械操作(ρ0.71)、手术流程(ρ0.41)、助手使用(ρ0.05)、程序知识(ρ0.32)以及对手术的总体舒适度(ρ0.73)等类别中表现出较差的相关性。PGY3住院医师在两个OSATS类别中缺乏相关性,即手术流程(ρ0.7)和程序知识(ρ0.2)。高年级住院医师的自我评估在所有领域与观察者评估都表现出很强的相关性。
随着渐进性培训,外科住院医师提高了技术技能自我意识。经验较少的学员倾向于高估或低估技术技能。