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"Taking Training to the Next Level": The American College of Surgeons Committee on Residency Training Survey.
J Surg Educ. 2017 Nov - Dec; 74(6):e95-e105.JS

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The American College of Surgeons (ACS) appointed a committee of leaders from the ACS, Association of Program Directors in Surgery, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, and American Board of Surgery to define key challenges facing surgery resident training programs and to explore solutions. The committee wanted to solicit the perspectives of surgery resident program directors (PDs) given their pivotal role in residency training.

DESIGN

Two surveys were developed, pilot tested, and administered to PDs following Institutional Review Board approval. PDs from 247 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited general surgery programs were randomized to receive 1 of the 2 surveys. Bias analyses were conducted, and adjusted Pearson χ[2] tests were used to test for differences in response patterns by program type and size.

SETTING

All accredited general surgery programs in the United States were included in the sampling frame of the survey; 10 programs with initial or withdrawn accreditation were excluded from the sampling frame.

PARTICIPANTS

A total of 135 PDs responded, resulting in a 54.7% response rate (Survey A: n = 67 and Survey B: n = 68). The respondent sample was determined to be representative of program type and size.

RESULTS

Nearly 52% of PD responses were from university-based programs, and 41% had over 6 residents per graduating cohort. More than 61% of PDs reported that, compared to 10 years ago, both entering and graduating residents are less prepared in technical skills. PDs expressed significant concerns regarding the effect of duty-hour restrictions on the overall preparation of graduating residents (61%) and quality of patient care (57%). The current 5-year training structure was viewed as needing a significant or extensive increase in opportunities for resident autonomy (63%), and the greatest barriers to resident autonomy were viewed to be patient preferences not to be cared for by residents (68%), liability concerns (68%), and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services regulations (65%). Although 64% of PDs believe that moderate or significant changes are needed in the current structure of residency training, 35% believe that no changes in the structure are needed. When asked for their 1 best recommendation regarding the structure of surgical residency, only 22% of PDs selected retaining the current 5-year structure. The greatest percentage of PDs (28%) selected the "4 + 2" model as their 1 best recommendation for the structure to be used. In the area of faculty development, 56% of PDs supported a significant or extensive increase in Train the Teacher programs, and 41% supported a significant or extensive increase in faculty certification in education.

CONCLUSIONS

Information regarding the valuable perspectives of PDs gathered through these surveys should help in implementing important changes in residency training and faculty development. These efforts will need to be pursued collaboratively with involvement of key stakeholders, including the organizations represented on this ACS committee.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Surgery, York Hospital/WellSpan Health, York, Pennsylvania. Electronic address: rdamewood@wellspan.org.Division of Education, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois.Department of Medical Education, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.Division of Education, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois.Division of Education, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois.Division of Education, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, Illinois.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28781132

Citation

Damewood, Richard B., et al. ""Taking Training to the Next Level": the American College of Surgeons Committee On Residency Training Survey." Journal of Surgical Education, vol. 74, no. 6, 2017, pp. e95-e105.
Damewood RB, Blair PG, Park YS, et al. "Taking Training to the Next Level": The American College of Surgeons Committee on Residency Training Survey. J Surg Educ. 2017;74(6):e95-e105.
Damewood, R. B., Blair, P. G., Park, Y. S., Lupi, L. K., Newman, R. W., & Sachdeva, A. K. (2017). "Taking Training to the Next Level": The American College of Surgeons Committee on Residency Training Survey. Journal of Surgical Education, 74(6), e95-e105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsurg.2017.07.008
Damewood RB, et al. "Taking Training to the Next Level": the American College of Surgeons Committee On Residency Training Survey. J Surg Educ. 2017 Nov - Dec;74(6):e95-e105. PubMed PMID: 28781132.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - "Taking Training to the Next Level": The American College of Surgeons Committee on Residency Training Survey. AU - Damewood,Richard B, AU - Blair,Patrice Gabler, AU - Park,Yoon Soo, AU - Lupi,Linda K, AU - Newman,Rachel Williams, AU - Sachdeva,Ajit K, Y1 - 2017/08/07/ PY - 2017/04/04/received PY - 2017/06/26/revised PY - 2017/07/08/accepted PY - 2017/8/7/pubmed PY - 2018/8/23/medline PY - 2017/8/8/entrez KW - Interpersonal and Communication Skills KW - Medical Knowledge KW - Patient Care KW - Practice-Based Learning and Improvement KW - Professionalism KW - Systems-Based Practice KW - autonomy KW - faculty development KW - program directors KW - residency structure KW - resident preparedness KW - resources SP - e95 EP - e105 JF - Journal of surgical education JO - J Surg Educ VL - 74 IS - 6 N2 - OBJECTIVE: The American College of Surgeons (ACS) appointed a committee of leaders from the ACS, Association of Program Directors in Surgery, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, and American Board of Surgery to define key challenges facing surgery resident training programs and to explore solutions. The committee wanted to solicit the perspectives of surgery resident program directors (PDs) given their pivotal role in residency training. DESIGN: Two surveys were developed, pilot tested, and administered to PDs following Institutional Review Board approval. PDs from 247 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited general surgery programs were randomized to receive 1 of the 2 surveys. Bias analyses were conducted, and adjusted Pearson χ[2] tests were used to test for differences in response patterns by program type and size. SETTING: All accredited general surgery programs in the United States were included in the sampling frame of the survey; 10 programs with initial or withdrawn accreditation were excluded from the sampling frame. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 135 PDs responded, resulting in a 54.7% response rate (Survey A: n = 67 and Survey B: n = 68). The respondent sample was determined to be representative of program type and size. RESULTS: Nearly 52% of PD responses were from university-based programs, and 41% had over 6 residents per graduating cohort. More than 61% of PDs reported that, compared to 10 years ago, both entering and graduating residents are less prepared in technical skills. PDs expressed significant concerns regarding the effect of duty-hour restrictions on the overall preparation of graduating residents (61%) and quality of patient care (57%). The current 5-year training structure was viewed as needing a significant or extensive increase in opportunities for resident autonomy (63%), and the greatest barriers to resident autonomy were viewed to be patient preferences not to be cared for by residents (68%), liability concerns (68%), and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services regulations (65%). Although 64% of PDs believe that moderate or significant changes are needed in the current structure of residency training, 35% believe that no changes in the structure are needed. When asked for their 1 best recommendation regarding the structure of surgical residency, only 22% of PDs selected retaining the current 5-year structure. The greatest percentage of PDs (28%) selected the "4 + 2" model as their 1 best recommendation for the structure to be used. In the area of faculty development, 56% of PDs supported a significant or extensive increase in Train the Teacher programs, and 41% supported a significant or extensive increase in faculty certification in education. CONCLUSIONS: Information regarding the valuable perspectives of PDs gathered through these surveys should help in implementing important changes in residency training and faculty development. These efforts will need to be pursued collaboratively with involvement of key stakeholders, including the organizations represented on this ACS committee. SN - 1878-7452 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28781132/ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -