Neurosurgical Residency Training at Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, the Resident Perspective.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Alexander G Yearley, Marcelle Altshuler, Ruchit V Patel, Jacob R Rachlin, Michael A Mooney
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Abstract

Background and objective: Department of Veteran's Affairs (VA) Medical Centers play a crucial role in training neurosurgery residents. Although previous studies have examined the impact of VA rotations from the attending perspective, the resident experience remains unexplored. We present a national survey of neurosurgery residents to assess their perceptions of VA rotations, focusing on operative experience, call burden, longitudinal patient care experiences, and overall strengths and limitations.

Methods: A 33-question survey was distributed by email to all neurosurgery residents who had previously completed a VA rotation within the past 7 years.

Results: Responses were received from 77 residents, representing 36 out of 40 neurosurgical residency programs with an active VA rotation. Most residents (79.2%) found their VA rotations adequate in length, having spent a median of 5 months at the VA. Residents completed an average of 11.7 (SD 7.2) cases per month while at the VA, including 8.9 (SD 5.5) spine, 1.7 (SD 2.0) cranial, and 1.4 (SD 1.6) peripheral nerve cases. Many residents reported completing a greater proportion of spine and peripheral nerve cases at the VA compared with their primary clinical sites. Across all postgraduate years, residents felt that the VA offered increased operative autonomy (79.0% agreement) at the expense of total operative volume (98.7% agreement) and complexity (81.9% agreement). Importantly, 94.8% of residents participated in longitudinal patient care experiences, and 59.7% followed all patients longitudinally.

Conclusion: The resident experience at the VA varies, presenting both strengths and limitations. Addressing these factors could enhance the overall effectiveness of VA rotations in neurosurgical training programs in the future.

退伍军人事务医疗中心的神经外科住院医师培训,住院医师的视角。
背景和目的:退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗中心在培训神经外科住院医师方面发挥着至关重要的作用。尽管以前的研究从主治医师的角度研究了退伍军人事务部轮转的影响,但对住院医师的体验仍未进行探讨。我们对神经外科住院医师进行了一项全国性调查,以评估他们对退伍军人医疗中心轮转的看法,重点是手术经验、出诊负担、纵向患者护理经验以及总体优势和局限性:方法: 通过电子邮件向所有在过去 7 年内完成过 VA 轮转的神经外科住院医师发放了一份包含 33 个问题的调查问卷:结果:共收到 77 位住院医师的回复,代表了 40 个神经外科住院医师项目中 36 个正在进行 VA 轮转的项目。大多数住院医师(79.2%)认为他们在退伍军人医院的轮转时间足够长,中位数为 5 个月。住院医师在退伍军人医院期间平均每月完成 11.7(标清 7.2)个病例,包括 8.9(标清 5.5)个脊柱病例、1.7(标清 2.0)个颅脑病例和 1.4(标清 1.6)个周围神经病例。许多住院医师表示,与他们的主要临床地点相比,在退伍军人事务部完成的脊柱和周围神经病例比例更高。在所有研究生年级中,住院医师认为退伍军人事务部提供了更多的手术自主权(79.0%同意),但牺牲了手术总量(98.7%同意)和复杂性(81.9%同意)。重要的是,94.8%的住院医师参与了纵向患者护理体验,59.7%的住院医师对所有患者进行了纵向跟踪:退伍军人事务部的住院医师经验各不相同,既有优势也有局限性。结论:住院医师在退伍军人医院的经历各不相同,既有优势也有局限性,解决这些因素可提高未来神经外科培训项目中退伍军人医院轮转的整体效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Operative Neurosurgery
Operative Neurosurgery Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
13.00%
发文量
530
期刊介绍: Operative Neurosurgery is a bi-monthly, unique publication focusing exclusively on surgical technique and devices, providing practical, skill-enhancing guidance to its readers. Complementing the clinical and research studies published in Neurosurgery, Operative Neurosurgery brings the reader technical material that highlights operative procedures, anatomy, instrumentation, devices, and technology. Operative Neurosurgery is the practical resource for cutting-edge material that brings the surgeon the most up to date literature on operative practice and technique
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