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PHILADELPHIA – The question of how prepared general surgery residents are to operate independently after their training is longstanding, but clear definitions of competency and readiness have been elusive. A consortium of general surgery residencies has developed a metric for assessing surgeon readiness, but what the metric revealed may be a cause for concern for the surgical profession.

Brian C. George, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, reported at the annual meeting of the American Surgical Association on results of a study designed to measure the autonomy and readiness for independent practice of residents at 14 general surgery programs.

Dr. Brian C. George
“There’s increasing concern that U.S. general surgery residents are not ready to operate independently by the time they graduate,” Dr. George said. “The true scope of this problem is unknown.”

The study found that in the final 6 months of training, 96% of residents were rated competent by their observers to perform a straightforward appendectomy on their own, but only 71% were rated the same for partial colectomy, Dr. George said.

The participating general surgery attendings rated residents according to three scales (J Surg Educ. 2016;73:e118-130):
 

•“Performance” scale to measure readiness for independent practice, with competence defined as practice-ready and exceptional performance.

• “Zwisch” scale, named after Jay Zwischenberger, MD, FACS, of the University of Kentucky, to assess the amount of autonomy granted to a resident by the supervising surgical attending.

• “Complexity” scale to measure the patient-related complexity of the case at hand.

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PHILADELPHIA – The question of how prepared general surgery residents are to operate independently after their training is longstanding, but clear definitions of competency and readiness have been elusive. A consortium of general surgery residencies has developed a metric for assessing surgeon readiness, but what the metric revealed may be a cause for concern for the surgical profession.

Brian C. George, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, reported at the annual meeting of the American Surgical Association on results of a study designed to measure the autonomy and readiness for independent practice of residents at 14 general surgery programs.

Dr. Brian C. George
“There’s increasing concern that U.S. general surgery residents are not ready to operate independently by the time they graduate,” Dr. George said. “The true scope of this problem is unknown.”

The study found that in the final 6 months of training, 96% of residents were rated competent by their observers to perform a straightforward appendectomy on their own, but only 71% were rated the same for partial colectomy, Dr. George said.

The participating general surgery attendings rated residents according to three scales (J Surg Educ. 2016;73:e118-130):
 

•“Performance” scale to measure readiness for independent practice, with competence defined as practice-ready and exceptional performance.

• “Zwisch” scale, named after Jay Zwischenberger, MD, FACS, of the University of Kentucky, to assess the amount of autonomy granted to a resident by the supervising surgical attending.

• “Complexity” scale to measure the patient-related complexity of the case at hand.

 

PHILADELPHIA – The question of how prepared general surgery residents are to operate independently after their training is longstanding, but clear definitions of competency and readiness have been elusive. A consortium of general surgery residencies has developed a metric for assessing surgeon readiness, but what the metric revealed may be a cause for concern for the surgical profession.

Brian C. George, MD, of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, reported at the annual meeting of the American Surgical Association on results of a study designed to measure the autonomy and readiness for independent practice of residents at 14 general surgery programs.

Dr. Brian C. George
“There’s increasing concern that U.S. general surgery residents are not ready to operate independently by the time they graduate,” Dr. George said. “The true scope of this problem is unknown.”

The study found that in the final 6 months of training, 96% of residents were rated competent by their observers to perform a straightforward appendectomy on their own, but only 71% were rated the same for partial colectomy, Dr. George said.

The participating general surgery attendings rated residents according to three scales (J Surg Educ. 2016;73:e118-130):
 

•“Performance” scale to measure readiness for independent practice, with competence defined as practice-ready and exceptional performance.

• “Zwisch” scale, named after Jay Zwischenberger, MD, FACS, of the University of Kentucky, to assess the amount of autonomy granted to a resident by the supervising surgical attending.

• “Complexity” scale to measure the patient-related complexity of the case at hand.

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Key clinical point: General surgery residents are often but not universally ready to independently perform core surgical procedures upon completion of surgical training.

Major finding: In the last 6 months of training, residents were rated competent 84% of the time in performing the five leading core procedures and 64% of the time for less-frequently performed procedures.

Data source: Ratings of 437 of 8,526 different observations of 522 residents at 14 institutions of the Procedural Learning and Safety Collaborative.

Disclosures: Dr. George and his coauthors reported having no financial disclosures.