Pediatric Urology, Brown University and Hasbro Children's Hospital, Providence, RI, USA.
Advanced Wound Care Center, Samaritan Hospital, Albany NY, USA.
J Pediatr Urol. 2024;20 Suppl 1:S4-S10. doi: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2024.05.021. Epub 2024 May 30.
Pediatric urology is a subspecialty of urology that emerged from a culture in which children with urological disorders were cared for by general urologists and general pediatric surgeons. The development of pediatric urology as a subspecialty was years in the making, highlighted by individuals who recognized that children with urological conditions were not just "small adults," but required special experience and training. Subspecialization was initiated by persistent visionaries who recognized the need for a trained cadre of experts to provide better care for children. It took the coordinated effort of all subgroups and leaderships in pediatric urology to push these efforts over the goal line. The focus of this review is to highlight certain individuals who played major roles in this vision and to document the efforts of many to coordinate the pathways to sub-specialization.
The careers of Meredith F. Campbell and Frank B. Bicknell were researched to identify their rationale and roles in developing pediatric urology as a distinct medical specialty in the United States. In addition, the minutes of the meetings of the Pediatric Urology Advisory Council (PUAC) with the American Board of Urology (ABU) were reviewed. The origins of the Society for Pediatric Urology (SPU) and the American Academy of Pediatrics Section of Urology (AAP-SOU) were researched. The contributions of each to the certification of pediatric urology as a distinct subspecialty was delineated.
Campbell was Chair of Urology at the New York University (NYU) School of Medicine and wrote prolifically about pediatric urology. He published one of the first practical textbooks in pediatric urology, almost completely self-written, in 1937. Bicknell, a general urologist in Michigan on the faculty at Wayne State University School of Medicine, led the initiative to create the Society for Pediatric Urology (SPU) that first met at the 1951 annual American Urological Association (AUA) meeting in Chicago and included nine attendees. Subsequently, John Lattimer (College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University) organized a well-attended meeting of urologists interested in pediatrics at the 1964 annual AAP meeting in New York City. This led to the formation of the AAP Section on Urology. Integral to the justification for the development of a subspecialty was evidence of a published corpus of content. In addition to published textbooks devoted exclusively to pediatric urology, this was further fulfilled by the AAP Section on Urology Pediatric Supplement to the Journal of Urology, first published in 1986, and later with the Journal of Pediatric Urology in 2005. The SPU and the AAP Section on Urology came together to form the Pediatric Urology Advisory Council (PUAC) in 2000, which worked with the ABU to create subspecialty certification in pediatric urology with an independent exam, first administered in 2008 to 176 applicants.
The metaphor "We have stood on the shoulders of giants" is apt for pediatric urology: Meredith Campbell, Frank Bicknell, David Innes Williams (Hospital for Sick Children, London), and J. Herbert Johnston (Alder Hay Hospital, Liverpool) come to mind among the first generation of pediatric urology pioneers, and others among their colleagues also had significant impact. Clearly this is a story of persistence and attention to detail on the part of those giants and those who followed. Pediatric urology became a distinct discipline after the SPU and AAP-SOU came together to create a robust cohort of pediatric urologists who through education and negotiation were able to help the ABU and the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) recognize that subspecialization would lead to better care for children with urologic disorders. This benchmark set a high bar for future subspecialization in urology and other fields.
小儿外科学是外科学的一个分支,它起源于一种文化,即患有泌尿系统疾病的儿童由普通泌尿科医生和普通小儿外科医生照顾。小儿外科学作为一个专科的发展历经多年,其特点是有一些人认识到患有泌尿系统疾病的儿童不仅仅是“小大人”,而是需要特殊的经验和培训。专业化是由那些认识到需要有一批训练有素的专家来为儿童提供更好护理的有远见的人发起的。推动这些努力达到目标需要小儿外科学所有亚组和领导层的协调努力。本综述的重点是突出在这一愿景中发挥重要作用的某些个人,并记录许多人为协调专业化途径所做的努力。
研究了 Meredith F. Campbell 和 Frank B. Bicknell 的职业生涯,以确定他们在美国将小儿外科学发展成为一门独特医学专业的基本原理和作用。此外,还审查了儿科泌尿科咨询委员会(PUAC)与美国泌尿科委员会(ABU)会议的记录。研究了小儿泌尿科协会(SPU)和美国儿科学会泌尿科分会(AAP-SOU)的起源。阐述了每个组织对小儿泌尿科认证为独立专科所做的贡献。
坎贝尔是纽约大学(NYU)医学院的泌尿科主席,他撰写了大量关于小儿外科学的文章。他于 1937 年出版了第一本实用的小儿外科学教科书,几乎完全是他自己写的。密歇根州韦恩州立大学医学院的普通泌尿科医生弗兰克·B·比克内尔(Frank B. Bicknell)率先发起成立了小儿泌尿科协会(SPU),该协会于 1951 年在芝加哥举行的美国泌尿科协会(AUA)年会上首次举行会议,有 9 人参加。随后,哥伦比亚大学医师与外科学院的约翰·拉蒂默(John Lattimer)在 1964 年纽约市美国儿科学会(AAP)年会上组织了一次参加人数众多的对儿科感兴趣的泌尿科医生会议。这导致了儿科学会泌尿科分会的成立。为了证明发展一个专科的合理性,除了专门用于小儿外科学的教科书外,还需要有发表的内容。除了专门用于小儿外科学的教科书外,这一点还通过 1986 年首次出版的《小儿泌尿科杂志》儿科增刊和 2005 年的《小儿泌尿科杂志》得到进一步满足。SPU 和 AAP-SOU 于 2000 年成立了儿科泌尿科咨询委员会(PUAC),与 ABU 合作创建了小儿泌尿科独立考试认证,该认证于 2008 年首次对 176 名申请人进行了管理。
“我们站在巨人的肩膀上”这句话很适合小儿外科学:Meredith Campbell、Frank Bicknell、David Innes Williams(伦敦 Sick Children's Hospital)和 J. Herbert Johnston(利物浦 Alder Hey Hospital)等第一代小儿外科学先驱者的名字浮现在脑海中,他们的同事中也有其他人产生了重大影响。显然,这是一个关于那些巨人以及追随他们的人的坚持不懈和注重细节的故事。在 SPU 和 AAP-SOU 联手创建了一批强大的小儿泌尿科医生队伍之后,小儿外科学成为了一个独立的学科,这些医生通过教育和谈判,帮助 ABU 和美国医学专业委员会(ABMS)认识到专业化将为患有泌尿系统疾病的儿童带来更好的护理。这一基准为未来泌尿科和其他领域的专业化设定了很高的标准。