Sacks Hayley A, Stepan Jeffrey G, Felix Karla, Albert Todd J, Bostrom Mathias P, Fufa Duretti T
Weill Cornell Medicine (Ms. Sacks), and the Department of Orthopedic Surgery (Dr. Stepan, Dr. Felix, Dr. Albert, Dr. Bostrom, and Dr. Fufa), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY.
J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev. 2019 May 28;3(5):e088. doi: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-18-00088. eCollection 2019 May.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) mandates certain procedural minimums for graduating residents of orthopaedic surgery programs and provides residency programs with comparative data on surgical case volume. It provides much less guidance and feedback to programs regarding the amount of time residents should spend on different rotations during residency. Comparative data regarding how much time residents are spending on general and subspecialty rotations may be of use to educational leadership as they consider curriculum changes and alternative training structures. The purpose of this study is to summarize the subspecialty rotation exposure across ACGME-accredited orthopaedic residency programs and to correlate the subspecialty rotation exposure with available program-specific factors.
This study contacted 162 ACGME-accredited orthopaedic residency programs and received rotation schedules from 115 programs (70.1%). Rotation schedules for postgraduate year 2 to 5 residents were categorized into the number of months spent on the following rotations: general orthopaedics, trauma, pediatrics, hand, sport, foot and ankle, arthroplasty, oncology, spine, research, and elective. The percentage of residency spent in each category was then calculated as the number of months divided by 48 months. Differences in the percent of residency spent on subspecialty rotations were compared for the following variables: program size and presence of subspecialty fellowships at the institution.
On average, the greatest percentage of residency spent was in the following categories: trauma (16.6%; 8.0 months), general orthopaedics (13.7%; 6.6 months), and pediatrics (12.5%; 6.0 months). Rotations with the highest variation between programs included the following: general orthopaedics (SD 5.8 months; range 0 to 30 months), sport (SD 2.5 months; range 0 to 15 months), and arthroplasty (SD 2.3 months; range 0 to 11.8 months). Sixty-seven programs (63.2%) had dedicated blocks for research, and 25 programs (23.6%) had dedicated blocks for electives. No notable correlations were found between subspecialty exposure and program size or availability of subspecialty fellowship training at the program.
Variability exists between ACGME-accredited orthopaedic surgery residency programs in subspecialty rotation exposure. Summarizing the subspecialty rotation exposure across accredited orthopaedic residency programs is useful to graduate medical education leadership for comparative purposes because they design and modify resident curricula.
毕业后医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)规定了骨科手术住院医师培训项目毕业生的某些程序最低要求,并为住院医师培训项目提供手术病例数量的比较数据。但它在住院医师培训期间应在不同轮转上花费的时间方面,为项目提供的指导和反馈要少得多。关于住院医师在普通和亚专科轮转上花费时间的比较数据,可能对教育领导层在考虑课程改革和替代培训结构时有所帮助。本研究的目的是总结ACGME认证的骨科住院医师培训项目中的亚专科轮转情况,并将亚专科轮转情况与可用的特定项目因素相关联。
本研究联系了162个ACGME认证的骨科住院医师培训项目,收到了115个项目(70.1%)的轮转时间表。将研究生二年级至五年级住院医师的轮转时间表按在以下轮转上花费的月数进行分类:普通骨科、创伤、儿科、手外科、运动医学、足踝外科、关节置换、肿瘤、脊柱、研究和选修。然后将每个类别中住院医师培训时间的百分比计算为月数除以48个月。比较了以下变量在亚专科轮转上花费的住院医师培训时间百分比的差异:项目规模和机构中亚专科奖学金的情况。
平均而言,住院医师培训时间占比最大的类别如下:创伤(16.6%;8.0个月)、普通骨科(13.7%;6.6个月)和儿科(12.5%;6.0个月)。项目间差异最大的轮转包括:普通骨科(标准差5.8个月;范围0至30个月)、运动医学(标准差2.5个月;范围0至15个月)和关节置换(标准差2.3个月;范围0至11.8个月)。67个项目(63.2%)有专门的研究模块,25个项目(23.6%)有专门的选修模块。在亚专科轮转情况与项目规模或项目中亚专科奖学金培训的可用性之间未发现显著相关性。
ACGME认证的骨科手术住院医师培训项目在亚专科轮转情况方面存在差异。总结认证的骨科住院医师培训项目中的亚专科轮转情况,对毕业后医学教育领导层进行比较很有用,因为他们设计和修改住院医师课程。