Hirose Kazuyuki, Poudel Saseem, Murakami Soichi, Kurashima Yo, Sato Nagato, Tojima Hiroyasu, Yokota Isao, Okada Kazufumi, Shichinohe Toshiaki, Hirano Satoshi
Department of Gastroenterological Surgery II, Hokkaido University Faculty of Medicine, Nishi-7, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido, 060-8638, Japan.
Center for Education Research and Innovation of Advanced Medical Technology, Hokkaido University Hospital, Sapporo, Japan.
World J Emerg Surg. 2025 Jun 5;20(1):49. doi: 10.1186/s13017-025-00623-5.
In Japan-particularly in the Hokkaido region-a limited number of dedicated trauma surgeons often compels general surgeons to serve as frontline providers of trauma care. However, their ability to perform critical trauma procedures and their level of confidence remain unclear. Understanding this gap is vital for guiding targeted training programs aimed at improving patient outcomes. Although conducted in one region, these findings may inform strategies in other remote or resource-limited settings worldwide, where timely surgical intervention significantly affects survival. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the experience and confidence of general surgeons in Hokkaido in performing 35 essential trauma procedures.
This prospective observational study surveyed all general surgeons and surgical residents working in hospitals that regularly perform surgical procedures in Hokkaido. Participants provided demographic information, trauma training history, and self-assessed confidence and experience in performing 35 procedures identified via a previous Delphi study. Confidence was defined as a Likert scale rating of 4 or 5. Comparisons were made between respondents with and without advanced trauma training (e.g., ATOM, DSTC) and between those who had managed more than 50 trauma cases versus fewer than 50.
Of 730 eligible participants, 444 completed the survey (62.2%). Over half (57.9%) reported fewer than 10 lifetime trauma surgeries, and 64.4% had not managed a trauma case in the past year. Only six procedures were rated confidently (≥ 4) by more than half the respondents, including endotracheal intubation, chest tube placement, and selected gastrointestinal procedures. Subgroup analyses indicated that surgeons generally had higher confidence in procedures related to their subspecialty, whereas less frequent or advanced trauma skills remained areas of concern. Surgeons with advanced trauma training or a higher trauma case volume (> 50) demonstrated significantly greater confidence in multiple trauma-specific skills.
General surgeons in Hokkaido lack confidence in most essential trauma procedures, particularly those encountered infrequently. Although these findings originate from one region, they underscore training gaps potentially relevant to other remote or resource-limited areas, where frontline trauma care demands targeted, high-yield interventions to improve outcomes.
在日本,尤其是北海道地区,由于专职创伤外科医生数量有限,普通外科医生常常不得不充当创伤护理的一线提供者。然而,他们实施关键创伤手术的能力以及信心水平仍不明确。了解这一差距对于指导旨在改善患者治疗效果的针对性培训计划至关重要。尽管本研究是在一个地区开展的,但这些发现可能为全球其他偏远或资源有限地区的策略制定提供参考,在这些地区,及时的手术干预对患者生存有着重大影响。因此,本研究的目的是评估北海道普通外科医生实施35项基本创伤手术的经验和信心。
这项前瞻性观察性研究对北海道所有在定期开展外科手术的医院工作的普通外科医生和外科住院医师进行了调查。参与者提供了人口统计学信息、创伤培训史,以及对通过先前德尔菲研究确定的35项手术的自我评估信心和经验。信心被定义为李克特量表评分为4或5。对接受过高级创伤培训(如ATOM、DSTC)和未接受过此类培训的受访者,以及处理过50多例创伤病例和处理过少于50例创伤病例的受访者进行了比较。
在730名符合条件的参与者中,444人完成了调查(62.2%)。超过半数(57.9%)的受访者报告其一生中进行的创伤手术少于10例,64.4%的人在过去一年中未处理过创伤病例。只有六项手术得到超过半数受访者的自信评分(≥4),包括气管插管、胸腔闭式引流管置入以及某些胃肠道手术。亚组分析表明,外科医生通常对与其亚专业相关的手术更有信心,而较少实施或较高级的创伤技能仍是令人担忧的领域。接受过高级创伤培训或处理创伤病例数量较多(>50例)的外科医生在多种创伤特定技能方面表现出明显更高的信心。
北海道的普通外科医生对大多数基本创伤手术缺乏信心,尤其是那些不常遇到的手术。尽管这些发现源于一个地区,但它们凸显了可能与其他偏远或资源有限地区相关的培训差距,在这些地区,一线创伤护理需要针对性的、高效的干预措施来改善治疗效果。