Department of Surgery, VA New Jersey Healthcare System, East Orange, New Jersey; Department of Surgery, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey.
Department of Surgery, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey.
J Surg Res. 2024 Mar;295:19-27. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2023.09.063. Epub 2023 Nov 15.
Previous studies have focused on outcomes pertaining to resident operative autonomy, but there has been little academic work examining the types of patients and cases where autonomy is afforded. We sought to describe the differences between surgical patient populations in teaching cases where residents are and are not afforded autonomy.
We examined all general and vascular operations at Veterans Affairs teaching hospitals from 2004 to 2019 using Veterans Affairs Surgical Quality Improvement Program. Level of resident supervision is prospectively recorded by the operating room nurse at the time of surgery: attending primary (AP): the attending performs the case with or without a resident; attending resident (AR): the resident performs the case with the attending scrubbed; resident primary (RP): resident operating with supervising attending not scrubbed. Resident (R) cases refer to AR + RP. Patient demographics, comorbidities, level of supervision, and top cases within each group were evaluated.
A total of 618,578 cases were analyzed; 154,217 (24.9%) were AP, 425,933 (68.9%) AR, and 38,428 (6.2%) RP. Using work relative value unit as a surrogate for complexity, RP was the least complex compared to AP and AR (10.4/14.4/14.8, P < 0.001). RP also had a lower proportion of American Society of Anesthesiologists 3 and 4 + 5 patients (P < 0.001), were younger (P < 0.001), and generally had lower comorbidities. The most common RP cases made up a higher proportion of all RP cases than they did for AP/AR and demonstrated several core competencies (hernia, cholecystectomy, appendectomy, amputation). R cases, however, were generally sicker than AP cases.
In the small proportion of cases where residents were afforded autonomy, we found they were more focused on the core general surgery cases on lower risk patients. This selection bias likely demonstrates appropriate attending judgment in affording autonomy. However, this cohort consisted of many "sicker" patients and those factors alone should not disqualify resident involvement.
先前的研究主要关注与住院医师手术自主性相关的结果,但很少有学术研究探讨赋予自主性的患者类型和病例。我们旨在描述在给予住院医师自主性和不给予自主性的教学病例中,手术患者人群的差异。
我们使用退伍军人事务部手术质量改进计划,检查了 2004 年至 2019 年退伍军人事务部教学医院的所有普通和血管手术。手术室护士在手术时前瞻性记录住院医师的监督级别:主治医生主刀(AP):主治医生主刀手术,是否有住院医师参与;主治医生和住院医师主刀(AR):住院医师主刀手术,主治医生洗手上台;住院医师主刀(RP):住院医师在未洗手的主治医生监督下主刀。住院医师(R)病例指的是 AR+RP。评估了每组内的患者人口统计学、合并症、监督级别和最高级别病例。
共分析了 618578 例病例;154217 例(24.9%)为 AP,425933 例(68.9%)为 AR,38428 例(6.2%)为 RP。使用工作相对价值单位作为复杂性的替代指标,RP 比 AP 和 AR 更简单(10.4/14.4/14.8,P<0.001)。RP 中美国麻醉医师协会 3 级和 4+5 级患者的比例也较低(P<0.001),患者年龄更小(P<0.001),且一般合并症较少。最常见的 RP 病例在所有 RP 病例中的比例高于 AP/AR,并且展示了几个核心能力(疝、胆囊切除术、阑尾切除术、截肢术)。然而,R 病例一般比 AP 病例更病重。
在给予住院医师自主性的少数病例中,我们发现他们更专注于低风险患者的核心普通外科病例。这种选择偏差可能表明主治医生在赋予自主性方面做出了适当的判断。然而,该队列中包含许多“病重”的患者,仅这些因素不应排除住院医师的参与。