在研究生医学教育认证委员会认证的骨科运动医学奖学金培训期间建立案例最低要求的基准

Jason Silvestre, Harris S. Slone, John D. Kelly
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摘要

背景:认证机构和外科教育专业协会越来越多地认识到需要病例最低要求,以加强标准化培训。目的:确定美国研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)认可的骨科运动医学奖学金期间手术培训的病例量基准。研究设计:横断面分析;证据水平,3。方法:计算acgme定义的病例类别的病例量百分位数,并使用线性回归分析时间变化。变异被定义为病例量的第90百分位和第10百分位之间的倍差。进行敏感性分析以确定病例最低要求的潜在目标。结果:分析了1281名骨科运动医学研究员的病例日志。在研究期间,报告的平均病例量增加(从323.3±125.0增加到375.6±144.0;P = .049)。儿科患者占病例的少数(年范围,6%-7%)。排名最后的第10百分位和第30百分位分别报告了179例和239例病例。大多数病例报告为肩袖(29%)、半月板(26%)和膝关节不稳(21%)。报告病例量的差异在髋关节镜手术中最大(37.0例),髌股不稳定(15.5例),足和踝关节(12.9例)和肘关节不稳定(10.7例)。在研究期间,膝关节不稳定(P = 0.006)和总(P = 0.028)病例的变异性降低,但足部和踝关节(P = 0.002)、膝关节多韧带修复/重建(P = 0.008)和膝关节截骨(P = 0.025)病例的变异性增加。结论:外科基准可以帮助未来的受训者和教师确定在奖学金培训期间改善手术经验和减少变异性的领域。最近研究员的手术经验表明,179至239例的潜在病例最低目标分别达到第10和第30个百分位数。然而,需要进一步的研究来确定acgme认可的骨科运动医学奖学金培训的循证病例最低要求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Establishing Benchmarks for Case Minimum Requirements During Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education–Accredited Orthopaedic Sports Medicine Fellowship Training
Background:Accrediting bodies and professional societies for surgical education are increasingly recognizing the need for case minimum requirements to enhance standardized training.Purpose:To determine case volume benchmarks for operative training during Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)–accredited orthopaedic sports medicine fellowships in the United States.Study Design:Cross-sectional analysis; Level of evidence, 3.Methods:Case volume percentiles were calculated across ACGME-defined case categories and temporal changes analyzed with linear regression. Variability was defined as the fold difference between the 90th and 10th percentiles by case volume. Sensitivity analyses were performed to identify potential targets for case minimum requirements.Results:Case logs from 1281 orthopaedic sports medicine fellows were analyzed. There was an increase in the mean reported case volume over the study period (from 323.3 ± 125.0 to 375.6 ± 144.0; P = .049). Pediatric patients accounted for a minority of cases (annual range, 6%-7%). The bottom 10th and 30th percentiles of fellows reported a total of 179 and 239 cases, respectively. Most cases were reported in the rotator cuff (29%), meniscus (26%), and knee instability (21%) categories. Variability in the reported case volume was greatest in hip arthroscopic surgery (37.0), patellofemoral instability (15.5), the foot and ankle (12.9), and elbow instability (10.7). Variability decreased for knee instability ( P = .006) and total ( P = .028) cases over the study period but increased for foot and ankle ( P = .002), knee multiligament repair/reconstruction ( P = .008), and knee osteotomy ( P = .025) cases.Conclusion:Surgical benchmarks can assist future trainees and faculty identify areas to improve the operative experience and reduce variability during fellowship training. The operative experience of recent fellows suggests a potential case minimum target between 179 and 239 cases to achieve the 10th and 30th percentiles, respectively. However, further research is needed to establish evidence-based case minimum requirements for ACGME-accredited orthopaedic sports medicine fellowship training.
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