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外科住院医师评估中的偏见:范围综述。

Bias in Surgical Residency Evaluations: A Scoping Review.

机构信息

Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.

Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

出版信息

J Surg Educ. 2023 Jul;80(7):922-947. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2023.04.007. Epub 2023 May 2.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Given widespread disparities in the surgical workforce and the advent of competency-based training models that rely on objective evaluations of resident performance, this review aims to describe the landscape of bias in the evaluation methods of residents in surgical training programs in the United States.

DESIGN

A scoping review was conducted within PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and ERIC in May 2022, without a date restriction. Studies were screened and reviewed in duplicate by 3 reviewers. Data were described descriptively.

SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: English-language studies conducted in the United States that assessed bias in the evaluation of surgical residents were included.

RESULTS

The search yielded 1641 studies, of which 53 met inclusion criteria. Of the included studies, 26 (49.1%) were retrospective cohort studies, 25 (47.2%) were cross-sectional studies, and 2 (3.8%) were prospective cohort studies. The majority included general surgery residents (n = 30, 56.6%) and nonstandardized examination modalities (n = 38, 71.7%), such as video-based skills evaluations (n = 5, 13.2%). The most common performance metric evaluated was operative skill (n = 22, 41.5%). Overall, the majority of studies demonstrated bias (n = 38, 73.6%) and most investigated gender bias (n = 46, 86.8%). Most studies reported disadvantages for female trainees regarding standardized examinations (80.0%), self-evaluations (73.7%), and program-level evaluations (71.4%). Four studies (7.6%) assessed racial bias, of which all reported disadvantages for trainees underrepresented in surgery.

CONCLUSIONS

Evaluation methods for surgery residents may be prone to bias, particularly with regard to female trainees. Research is warranted regarding other implicit and explicit biases, such as racial bias, as well as for nongeneral surgery subspecialties.

摘要

目的

鉴于外科劳动力存在广泛差异,以及基于能力的培训模式的出现,该模式依赖于对住院医师绩效的客观评估,本综述旨在描述美国外科培训计划住院医师评估方法中的偏见情况。

设计

2022 年 5 月在 PubMed、Embase、Web of Science 和 ERIC 中进行了范围综述,没有日期限制。由 3 名评审员对研究进行了重复筛选和审查。数据采用描述性方法进行描述。

设置/参与者:纳入了在美国进行的评估外科住院医师评估中存在偏见的英语研究。

结果

搜索结果产生了 1641 项研究,其中 53 项符合纳入标准。在纳入的研究中,26 项(49.1%)为回顾性队列研究,25 项(47.2%)为横断面研究,2 项(3.8%)为前瞻性队列研究。大多数研究纳入了普通外科住院医师(n=30,56.6%)和非标准化检查方式(n=38,71.7%),例如基于视频的技能评估(n=5,13.2%)。评估的最常见绩效指标是手术技能(n=22,41.5%)。总体而言,大多数研究显示存在偏见(n=38,73.6%),且大多数研究调查了性别偏见(n=46,86.8%)。大多数研究报告了女性受训者在标准化考试(80.0%)、自我评估(73.7%)和计划水平评估(71.4%)方面处于不利地位。有 4 项研究(7.6%)评估了种族偏见,其中所有研究都报告了手术中代表性不足的受训者处于不利地位。

结论

外科住院医师的评估方法可能存在偏见,尤其是对女性受训者。需要对其他隐性和显性偏见进行研究,例如种族偏见,以及非普通外科专业的情况。

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