Comparing Different Pathways in Medical Education and Surgical Training: A Global Survey of Surgeons.

IF 1.5 Q3 SURGERY
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Global Open Pub Date : 2024-10-28 eCollection Date: 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1097/GOX.0000000000006224
Alexandra Bucknor, Rachel Pedreira, Deepa Bhat, Maryam Zamani, Nora Nugent, Heather J Furnas
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Abstract

Background: Currently, interest in surgical careers is declining globally, whereas aging populations are contributing to a rising demand for surgical procedures. Surgeons who conduct scientific investigations and share clinical advances internationally pay little attention to comparing differences in ways nations attract, educate, and train their surgeons. This study compares international pathways toward surgeon development with the aim of seeking best practices and improving the outlook of surgery as an attractive career.

Methods: A 70-question anonymous survey was distributed internationally to surgeons of all specialties. Data were analyzed in SPSS Statistics for Macintosh (IBM). A value of P less than 0.05 indicates statistical significance.

Results: The 463 respondents from the United States (59%), the United Kingdom (16%), Europe (10%), Canada (5%), and the rest of the world (10%) averaged age 46, and 64% were women. Non-US/Canadian respondents (93%) attended 5- and 6-year medical schools; US respondents were far more likely (91%) to attend nonmedical 4-or-more-year university before medical school. Weekly training-hour mandates spanned less than or equal to 48 (9%) to 80 or more (45%); 76% surpassed mandate hours, and just 9% reported accurate hours. Average educational debt ranged from $14,000 (Europe) to $179,000 (US). Few (19%) felt training allowed family building.

Conclusion: Based on best practices from different countries, the authors recommend a 6-year maximum university/medical education requirement, elimination of nonsurgical training years (mandatory in some countries), single-program surgical training, objective measure of work hours, optimizing weekly hours, improved support for family building, and end-of-training certification options.

比较医学教育和外科培训的不同途径:全球外科医生调查。
背景:目前,全球范围内对外科职业的兴趣正在下降,而人口老龄化却导致对外科手术的需求不断上升。在国际上开展科学研究和分享临床进展的外科医生很少关注比较各国在吸引、教育和培训外科医生方面的差异。本研究比较了国际外科医生的发展途径,旨在寻求最佳实践,改善外科学作为一种有吸引力的职业的前景:方法:在全球范围内向所有专科的外科医生发放了一份包含 70 个问题的匿名调查问卷。数据采用 Macintosh 版 SPSS 统计软件(IBM)进行分析。P 值小于 0.05 表示统计意义显著:来自美国(59%)、英国(16%)、欧洲(10%)、加拿大(5%)和世界其他地区(10%)的 463 名受访者平均年龄为 46 岁,64% 为女性。非美国/加拿大受访者(93%)就读于 5 年制和 6 年制医学院校;美国受访者(91%)更有可能在就读医学院校之前就读于 4 年制或 4 年以上的非医科大学。每周培训时数规定从少于或等于 48 小时(9%)到 80 小时或以上(45%)不等;76% 的受访者超过了规定时数,仅有 9% 的受访者报告了准确时数。平均教育债务从 14,000 美元(欧洲)到 179,000 美元(美国)不等。很少有人(19%)认为培训有助于家庭建设:根据不同国家的最佳实践,作者建议大学/医学教育要求最长为6年,取消非外科培训年限(在一些国家是强制性的),单一项目外科培训,客观衡量工时,优化每周工时,改善对家庭建设的支持,以及培训结束后的认证选择。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
1584
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open is an open access, peer reviewed, international journal focusing on global plastic and reconstructive surgery.Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open publishes on all areas of plastic and reconstructive surgery, including basic science/experimental studies pertinent to the field and also clinical articles on such topics as: breast reconstruction, head and neck surgery, pediatric and craniofacial surgery, hand and microsurgery, wound healing, and cosmetic and aesthetic surgery. Clinical studies, experimental articles, ideas and innovations, and techniques and case reports are all welcome article types. Manuscript submission is open to all surgeons, researchers, and other health care providers world-wide who wish to communicate their research results on topics related to plastic and reconstructive surgery. Furthermore, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open, a complimentary journal to Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, provides an open access venue for the publication of those research studies sponsored by private and public funding agencies that require open access publication of study results. Its mission is to disseminate high quality, peer reviewed research in plastic and reconstructive surgery to the widest possible global audience, through an open access platform. As an open access journal, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open offers its content for free to any viewer. Authors of articles retain their copyright to the materials published. Additionally, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery—Global Open provides rapid review and publication of accepted papers.
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