학술논문

Do General Surgery Residents Begin Specializing Before Fellowship? A Multi-Institutional Study from the US ROPE Consortium.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of the American College of Surgeons (2563-9021). Nov2022, Vol. 235 Issue 5, p799-808. 10p.
Subject
*TRAUMA surgery
*WORK experience (Employment)
*RESEARCH
*AFFINITY groups
*HOSPITAL medical staff
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*OPERATIVE surgery
*JOB qualifications
*MINIMALLY invasive procedures
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*INTERNSHIP programs
*NURSING practice
*COMPARATIVE studies
*VASCULAR surgery
*GRADUATE education
*CRITICAL care medicine
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*CHI-squared test
*MEDICAL fellowships
*DATA analysis software
*ODDS ratio
*MEDICAL specialties & specialists
Language
ISSN
2563-9021
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single-center data suggest that general surgery residents perform more cases related to their future fellowship compared with their peers. This study aimed to determine whether this experience was true for residents across multiple programs. STUDY DESIGN: Data from graduates of 18 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)–accredited general surgery residency programs in the US Resident OPerative Experience (ROPE) Consortium were analyzed. Residents were categorized as entering 1 of 12 fellowships or entering directly into general surgery practice. Case log operative domains were mapped to each fellowship, and analyses were performed between groups. RESULTS: Of 1,192 graduated general surgery residents, 955 (80%) pursued fellowship training whereas 235 (20%) went directly into general surgery practice. The top 3 fellowships pursued were trauma/surgical critical care (18%), vascular surgery (13%), and minimally invasive surgery (12%). Residents entering minimally invasive surgery performed the most total cases, whereas residents pursuing breast performed the least (1,209 [1,056–1,325] vs 1,091 [1,006–1,171], p < 0.01). For each fellowship type, graduates completed more total fellowship-specific cases in their future specialty compared with their peers (all p < 0.05). This association was observed for all 12 fellowships at the surgeon chief level (all p < 0.05) and for 10 of 12 fellowships at the surgeon junior level (all p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: General surgery residents perform more cases related to their future specialty choice compared with their peers. These data suggest that the specialization process begins during residency. This tendency among residents should be considered as general surgery residency undergoes structural redesign in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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