Department of Surgery, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts; Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Division of Pediatric Surgery, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital, Chicago, Illinois.
J Surg Educ. 2018 Nov;75(6):1520-1525. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2018.03.009. Epub 2018 Apr 11.
Traditionally, surgical educators have relied upon participant survey data for the evaluation of educational interventions. However, the ability of such subjective data to completely evaluate an intervention is limited. Our objective was to compare resident and attending surgeons' self-assessments of coaching sessions from surveys with independent observations from analysis of intraoperative and postoperative coaching transcripts.
Senior residents were video-recorded operating. Each was then coached by the operative attending in a 1:1 video review session. Teaching points made in the operating room (OR) and in post-OR coaching sessions were coded by independent observers using dialogue analysis then compared using t-tests. Participants were surveyed regarding the degree of teaching dedicated to specific topics and perceived changes in teaching level, resident comfort, educational assessments, and feedback provision between the OR and the post-OR coaching sessions.
A single, large, urban, tertiary-care academic institution.
Ten PGY4 to 5 general surgery residents and 10 attending surgeons.
Although the reported experiences of teaching and coaching sessions by residents and faculty were similar (Pearson correlation coefficient = 0.88), these differed significantly from independent observations. Observers found that residents initiated a greater proportion of teaching points and had more educational needs assessments during coaching, compared to the OR. However, neither residents nor attendings reported a change between the 2 environments with regard to needs assessments nor comfort with asking questions or making suggestions. The only metric on which residents, attendings, and observers agreed was the provision of feedback.
Participants' perspectives, although considered highly reliable by traditional metrics, rarely aligned with analysis of the associated transcripts from independent observers. Independent observation showed a distinct benefit of coaching in terms of frequency and type of learning points. These findings highlight the importance of seeking different perspectives, data sources, and methodologies when evaluating clinical education interventions. Surgical education can benefit from increased use of dialogue analyses performed by independent observers, which may represent a viewpoint distinct from that obtained by survey methodology.
传统上,外科教育者依赖于参与者调查数据来评估教育干预措施。然而,这种主观数据完全评估干预措施的能力是有限的。我们的目的是将住院医师和主治外科医生对辅导课程的自我评估与术中及术后辅导记录的独立观察进行比较。
高级住院医师进行手术录像。然后,每位住院医师都在 1:1 的视频审查会议中接受手术主治医生的辅导。独立观察员使用对话分析对手术室(OR)和 OR 后的辅导课程中提出的教学要点进行编码,然后使用 t 检验进行比较。参与者就特定主题的教学程度以及在 OR 和 OR 后的辅导课程中教学水平、住院医师舒适度、教育评估和反馈提供方面的感知变化进行了调查。
一家大型城市学术机构。
10 名 PGY4 至 5 年级普通外科住院医师和 10 名主治外科医生。
尽管住院医师和教职员工报告的教学和辅导课程经验相似(皮尔逊相关系数=0.88),但这些经验与独立观察结果有很大差异。观察者发现,与 OR 相比,住院医师在辅导过程中提出了更多的教学要点,并且进行了更多的教育需求评估。然而,无论是住院医师还是主治医生,都没有报告在这两个环境之间的需求评估或提问、提出建议的舒适度方面发生变化。唯一的指标是反馈的提供,这一点住院医师、主治医生和观察员是一致的。
尽管参与者的观点被传统指标认为是高度可靠的,但很少与独立观察员相关联的转录本分析相一致。独立观察显示,辅导在学习要点的频率和类型方面具有明显的优势。这些发现强调了在评估临床教育干预措施时寻求不同观点、数据来源和方法的重要性。外科教育可以从增加独立观察员进行的对话分析中受益,这可能代表了与调查方法获得的观点不同。