Department of Surgery at the Uniformed Services University, the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
Department of Surgery at the Uniformed Services University, the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland.
J Surg Educ. 2019 Jul-Aug;76(4):1139-1145. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2018.12.008. Epub 2019 Apr 2.
Newly-graduated military general surgeons often find themselves isolated at sea, solely responsible for all surgical care of several thousand sailors, regardless of the surgical specialty training required for any individual procedure. This educational need assessment explored trends in afloat surgical care over the last 25 years, and assessed trainees' preparedness for their expected role as an isolated surgeon.
A sample of deidentified US Navy Ship's Surgeon case logs were reviewed to determine afloat case load trends in 5 common afloat case categories (urologic/gynecologic, anorectal, hernia, appendectomy, and hand/orthopedic/trauma) from 1990s to 2017. Individual procedures were mapped to American College of Surgeons/Military Health System Knowledge, Skills, and Attitudes line items to ensure afloat-relevant skills were identified. Recent military resident case logs were then compared with afloat cases to evaluate relevant trainee experience.
US Navy ships at sea from 1995 to 2017.
US Navy afloat-deployed surgeons, totaling 1340 cases within the study period.
Case log analysis of 1340 surgeries, comprising >200 months at sea, reflected 46 named procedures; 34 of 46 (74%) correlated to an intraoperative knowledge, skills, and attitudes item. The most common surgeries were vasectomy, (304 of 1340, 23%). No difference in case mix was apparent comparing pre- and post-2000 deployments (representing afloat laparoscopic integration) in 4 of 5 categories, while hernias proportionally declined. Case volume per deployment markedly declined overall (p < 0.001) and in each category. Resident case log analysis from 2012 to 2016 showed experience was limited in urologic/gynecologic, orthopedic, and open appendectomy categories.
No formal case repository exists for afloat surgery, making detailed analysis problematic. Current training provides excellent surgical education but minimal exposure to rare-but-real cases expected on deployments, which may not translate to competency for the isolated, afloat surgeon. Military surgical leadership should embrace training for these cases and assertively invest in the development of the military's newest surgeons.
新毕业的普通外科军医在海上往往会感到孤立无援,他们要独自负责几千名水手的所有外科护理工作,而不管任何手术所需的专业培训。这项教育需求评估探讨了过去 25 年中海上外科护理的趋势,并评估了受训者对其作为孤立外科医生的预期角色的准备情况。
对美国海军舰艇外科医生的匿名病例记录进行了抽样审查,以确定 1990 年代至 2017 年 5 种常见海上病例类别(泌尿科/妇科、肛肠、疝、阑尾切除术和手/骨科/创伤)中的海上病例量趋势。将个别手术映射到美国外科医师学院/军事卫生系统知识、技能和态度项目上,以确保确定了与海上相关的技能。然后将最近的军事住院医师病例记录与海上病例进行比较,以评估相关受训者的经验。
1995 年至 2017 年期间的美国海军舰艇。
在研究期间,共有 1340 名美国海军海上部署的外科医生参与。
对 1340 例手术的病例记录分析,包括超过 200 个月的海上时间,反映了 46 种命名手术;46 种手术中的 34 种(74%)与术中知识、技能和态度项目相关。最常见的手术是输精管切除术,占 1340 例中的 304 例(23%)。在 5 个类别中的 4 个类别中,术前和术后 2000 年(代表海上腹腔镜整合)的手术组合没有明显差异,而疝的比例则下降。每个类别的整体(p < 0.001)和每个部署的手术量都明显下降。2012 年至 2016 年的住院医师病例记录分析显示,在泌尿科/妇科、骨科和开放阑尾切除术类别中经验有限。
海上手术没有正式的病例库,因此详细分析存在问题。目前的培训提供了出色的外科教育,但对部署中可能遇到的罕见但真实的病例接触甚少,这可能无法转化为孤立海上外科医生的能力。军事外科领导层应接受这些病例的培训,并积极投资于培养军队最新的外科医生。