Title of article :
How much time do surgical residents need to learn operative surgery?
Author/Authors :
Raphael S. Chung، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
3
From page :
351
To page :
353
Abstract :
Background We calculated the time a resident spent to acquire the average operative experience before mandated duty hours, to generate a standard for curriculum redesign. Methods By using data from 2002 to 2003 furnished by the Residency Review Committee for Surgery, and the operation times of attending surgeons in a hospital consortium, the time devoted to operative surgery over 5 years of training were calculated. Results An average of 2753 hours or 14.3% of 19,200 hours (5 years of 80-hour work weeks) were spent as a chief surgeon, 272 hours as an assistant, and another 938 hours for immediate preoperative and postoperative attendance. The average total time for operative training was 3963 hours or 20.6% of 5 years of 80-hour weeks (16.5 h/wk). Conclusions The database is useful for redesigning the surgical curriculum for the mandated duty hours. It also may be used to determine rapidly if a program currently is providing sufficient time for operative surgery.
Keywords :
Duty hours , Operation times , Surgical resident training , Training programs , Operative experience , The 80-hour work week
Journal title :
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number :
618024
Link To Document :
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