Resident education in surgical endoscopy.Am Surg. 1992 Oct; 58(10):643-6.AS
Under the auspices of the Resident Education Committee of the Society of American Gastrointestinal Endoscopic Surgeons, 158 of 298 (53%) of surgical training program directors responded to a survey on the current status of endoscopy in residency programs. Although 100 per cent claim that gastrointestinal endoscopy is provided by their program, only 76 per cent have formal endoscopy training, usually centered around the PGY 3 level, with only 23 per cent having didactic lectures in endoscopy. Directors claim to have trained nearly all of their residents by the completion of residency, averaging 44 esophagogastroscopies, 37 colonoscopies, and 46 flexible sigmoidoscopies per resident. However, they feel only 71 per cent of trainees are able to perform esophagogastroscopies and 67 per cent to perform colonoscopies in clinical practice. Ninety-seven per cent of directors feel endoscopy is important to surgical residency training, and 87 per cent have full-time faculty doing endoscopy. Only 44 per cent have a director of endoscopy; endoscopy is supervised by surgeons exclusively in only 48 per cent. Only 35 per cent have ongoing endoscopy research. When surgeons are not performing endoscopy, 66 per cent feel that the gastrointestinal (GI) service provides adequate service or training. Gastroenterology has a monopoly in endoscopy at 28 per cent of institutions, and 67 per cent of program directors feel there would be resistance to the formation of a separate surgical endoscopy service. Surgeons work in their own surgical endoscopy suite in only 15 per cent of institutions; in a GI suite in 13 per cent; and in a combined suite in the remainder.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)