Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Surgery, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorodo.
Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Center for Surgery and Public Health, Harvard Medical School, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Surgery, Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Surg Educ. 2018 Jul-Aug;75(4):1014-1021. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.09.014. Epub 2017 Oct 23.
A substantial proportion of adverse intraoperative events are attributed to failures in nontechnical skills. To strengthen these skills and improve surgical safety, the Non-Technical Skills for Surgeons (NOTSS) taxonomy was developed as a common framework. The NOTSS taxonomy was adapted for low- and middle-income countries, where variable resources pose a significant challenge to safe surgery. The NOTSS for variable-resource contexts (VRC) curriculum was developed and implemented in Rwanda, with the aim of enhancing knowledge and attitudes about nontechnical skills and promoting surgical safety.
The NOTSS-VRC curriculum was developed through a rigorous process of integrating contextually appropriate values. It was implemented as a 1-day training course for surgical and anesthesia postgraduate trainees. The curriculum comprises lectures, videos, and group discussions. A pretraining and posttraining questionnaire was administered to compare knowledge and attitudes regarding nontechnical skills, and their potential to improve surgical safety.
The setting of this study was in the tertiary teaching hospital of Kigali, Rwanda.
Participants were residents of the University of Kigali. A total of 55 residents participated from general surgery (31.4%), obstetrics (25.5%), anesthesia (17.6%), and other surgical specialties (25.5%).
In a paired analysis, understanding of NOTSS improved significantly (55.6% precourse, 80.9% postcourse, p<0.01). All residents reported that the course would improve their ability to provide safer patient care, and 97.4% believed developing nontechnical skills would improve patient outcomes.
Nontechnical skills must be highlighted in surgical training in low- and middle-income countries. The NOTSS-VRC curriculum can be implemented without additional technology or significant financial cost. Its deliberate design for resource-constrained settings allows it to be used both as an educational course and a quality improvement strategy. Our research demonstrates it is feasible to improve knowledge and attitudes about NOTSS through a 1-day course, and represents a novel approach to improving global surgical safety.
相当一部分术中不良事件归因于非技术技能的失败。为了加强这些技能并提高手术安全性,开发了外科医生非技术技能(NOTSS)分类法作为通用框架。NOTSS 分类法已适用于资源有限的低收入和中等收入国家,这些国家的可变资源对手术安全构成了重大挑战。NOTSS 可变资源环境(VRC)课程已在卢旺达开发和实施,旨在增强对非技术技能的知识和态度,并促进手术安全。
NOTSS-VRC 课程是通过整合适当的背景价值观的严格过程开发的。它作为一门为期 1 天的外科和麻醉研究生培训课程实施。课程包括讲座、视频和小组讨论。在培训前和培训后进行问卷调查,以比较非技术技能的知识和态度及其对提高手术安全性的潜力。
本研究的地点是卢旺达基加利的一所三级教学医院。
参与者是基加利大学的居民。共有 55 名居民参加了普外科(31.4%)、妇产科(25.5%)、麻醉科(17.6%)和其他外科专业(25.5%)的课程。
在配对分析中,对 NOTSS 的理解显著提高(课前 55.6%,课后 80.9%,p<0.01)。所有居民都表示该课程将提高他们提供更安全患者护理的能力,97.4%的人认为发展非技术技能将改善患者的预后。
在中低收入国家的外科培训中必须强调非技术技能。NOTSS-VRC 课程无需额外的技术或重大财务成本即可实施。其针对资源有限环境的精心设计使其既可以用作教育课程,也可以用作质量改进策略。我们的研究表明,通过为期 1 天的课程可以提高对 NOTSS 的知识和态度,这代表了提高全球手术安全性的一种新方法。