Jajja Mohammad Raheel, Lovasik Brendan P, Kim Steven C, Wang Vivian L, Hinman Johanna M, Delman Keith A, Srinivasan Jahnavi K
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia; Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia.
J Surg Educ. 2019 Nov-Dec;76(6):e152-e160. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2019.08.004. Epub 2019 Sep 20.
Autonomy is of foremost concern in the current era of surgical residency, and it is especially important to trainees when considering their surgical education. Factors impacting trainee independence include the restriction of clinical work hours and the development of advanced minimally invasive techniques such as robotics, which requires separate technical education outside of conventional surgical education. Moreover, when residents are left to learn fundamental exposures via their clinical experience alone, they run the risk of not being exposed to some fundamental skills based on case volume and type. The Department of Surgery at Emory University developed a cadaver-based simulation curriculum to standardize exposure to fundamental operative skills and enhance proficiency outside the operating room, with the larger aim of improving resident autonomy.
Residents were assigned to small groups led by a chief resident with an even distribution of postgraduate year (PGY) levels. Each group participated in core surgical exposures and fundamental maneuvers on a cadaver over a 6-hour session. Residents were tested on skills according to their PGY level about 1 month after the course. Testing included recitation of the skill in an oral boards format, highlighting major steps, followed by performance of the skill. All steps were video-recorded with no resident identifiers. These were reviewed by 2 independent, blinded faculty examiners who assigned proficiency grades to each resident video.
Three hundred and thirty-three individual procedure evaluations were done over the 5-year period. Senior residents (PGY3-5) had 86% pass rate while junior residents (PGY1-2) had 70% pass rate. Overall, 21% of residents failed to achieve competence in their assigned skills. Junior residents were less likely to achieve competence compared to senior residents. Faculty graders had improved congruence in grading as the course progressed through the 5 years. The most recent 2 years had >80% congruence in faculty grading compared to less than 50% congruence in the first 2 years. 81% of attendings agreed this course positively influenced the granting of autonomy in the operating room.
A cadaveric skills course focused on fundamental maneuvers with objective confirmation of achieving competency is a viable adjunct to clinical operative experience. Video-recorded evaluation, of these fundamental skills improved both resident and attending confidence in trainee operative skill.
在当前外科住院医师培训时代,自主性是首要关注的问题,对于考虑接受外科教育的学员而言尤为重要。影响学员独立性的因素包括临床工作时间的限制以及先进的微创技术(如机器人技术)的发展,这需要在传统外科教育之外进行单独的技术培训。此外,当住院医师仅依靠临床经验来学习基本的手术暴露时,由于病例数量和类型的原因,他们可能无法接触到某些基本技能。埃默里大学外科系开发了一门基于尸体的模拟课程,以规范基本手术技能的培训,并在手术室之外提高熟练程度,其更大的目标是提高住院医师的自主性。
住院医师被分成由一名总住院医师带领的小组,各小组中研究生年级(PGY)水平分布均匀。每个小组在一次6小时的课程中,在尸体上参与核心手术暴露和基本操作。课程结束约1个月后,根据住院医师的PGY水平对其技能进行测试。测试包括以口试形式复述技能,强调主要步骤,然后进行技能操作。所有步骤均进行视频录制,不显示住院医师的身份标识。由两名独立的、不知情的教员考官对这些视频进行评审,他们为每个住院医师的视频评定熟练程度等级。
在5年期间共进行了333次个人手术评估。高年级住院医师(PGY3 - 5)的通过率为86%,而低年级住院医师(PGY1 - 2)的通过率为70%。总体而言,21%的住院医师未能掌握所分配技能的能力。与高年级住院医师相比,低年级住院医师更不容易掌握技能。随着课程在5年中推进,教员评分的一致性有所提高。最近两年教员评分的一致性超过80%,而前两年则不到50%。81%的主治医师认为该课程对在手术室授予自主性产生了积极影响。
一门专注于基本操作并对能力达成进行客观确认的尸体技能课程,是临床手术经验的可行辅助。对这些基本技能的视频录制评估提高了住院医师和主治医师对学员手术技能的信心。