学员的自主性与幸福感有关。

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE
Christina L Cui, Margaret A Reilly, Eric B Pillado, Ruojia Debbie Li, Joshua S Eng, Yue Jiang, Leanne E Grafmuller, Kathryn L DiLosa, Allan M Conway, Guillermo A Escobar, Palma M Shaw, Yue-Yung Hu, Karl Y Bilimoria, Malachi G Sheahan, Dawn M Coleman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导读:渐进式委托是达到独立实践的关键。在过去的十年中,特别是随着血管外科培训渠道的发展,对临床培训过程中渐进式委托的关注越来越多。本研究的目的是评估血管外科受训者的自主性及其与他们的幸福感和学习环境的关系。方法:数据是通过一项保密的自愿调查收集的,该调查是在2020-2024年VSITEs作为第二次试验血管臂的辅助试验后进行的。自主性的定义包括手术自主性、临床自主性和手术时间。受训者在李克特量表上对每个组成部分的满意度进行排名,随后进行二分类。使用单变量逻辑回归来评估自主性和幸福感结果之间的关系。采用多变量logistic回归分析学习环境因素与学员自主性不满意的关系。结果:2020-2024年共收集调查结果3272份。约3.9% (n=117)的受访者不满意手术自主性,2.0% (n=52)的受访者不满意临床自主性,4.2% (n=93)的受访者不满意在手术室的时间。这些比率没有随时间变化(p < 0.05)。在2024份调查问卷中,对自主性不满意和满意的受训者在人口统计学变量上唯一有统计学意义的差异是性别(不满意的女性占12%,男性占5%,p=0.016)。比较各组间各学习环境因素差异有统计学意义(p)。结论:少数血管学员对自主学习表现不满意。那些接受过培训的人有更高的几率出现不良的培训经历,包括倦怠、工作与生活冲突、减员念头和自杀念头。对受训者的自主性和手术时间进行监控可以减轻这种风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trainee Autonomy is Associated with Well-being.

Introduction: Progressive entrustment is critical to reaching independent practice. Concerns around progressive entrustment during clinical training have grown in the past decade, especially with the evolution of the vascular surgery training pipeline. The purpose of this study is to evaluate vascular surgery trainee perceptions of autonomy and its associations with their well-being and learning environment.

Methods: Data was collected through a confidential, voluntary survey administered after the 2020-2024 VSITEs as an adjunct to the vascular arm of the SECOND trial. Autonomy was defined by operative autonomy, clinical autonomy, and operative time. Trainees ranked their degree of satisfaction with each component on a Likert scale, which was subsequently dichotomized. Univariable logistic regression was used to evaluate the association between autonomy and well-being outcomes. Multivariable logistic regression was used to evaluate learning environment factors associated with trainee dissatisfaction with autonomy.

Results: A total of 3,272 survey results were collected from 2020-2024. Approximately 3.9% (n=117) of survey responses reported dissatisfaction with operative autonomy, 2.0% (n=52) of responses reported dissatisfaction with clinical autonomy, and 4.2% (n=93) of responses reported dissatisfaction with the amount of time spent in the operating room. These rates did not change over time (p>0.05). Within 2024 responses, the only statistically significant difference in demographic variables between trainees who were dissatisfied with autonomy and those who were satisfied was gender (dissatisfaction: 12% females versus 5% males, p=0.016). In comparison, all learning environment factors were statistically significantly different between groups (p<0.001). On adjusted analysis, dissatisfaction with autonomy was driven by trainee perceptions of faculty engagement (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 4.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.9-12, p<0.001) and efficiency and program resources (aOR 10.9, 95%CI 4.4-26.8, p<0.001). Perceptions of autonomy also had significant associations with well-being metrics. Trainees who reported dissatisfaction with their autonomy were also more likely to report burnout, thoughts of attrition, suicidal ideation, professional dissatisfaction, and personal dissatisfaction.

Conclusion: A minority of vascular trainees expressed dissatisfaction with their autonomy. Those who did had higher odds of adverse training experiences, including burnout, work-life conflict, thoughts of attrition, and suicidal ideation. Program monitoring of trainee autonomy and operative time may mitigate this risk.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
13.30%
发文量
603
审稿时长
50 days
期刊介绍: Annals of Vascular Surgery, published eight times a year, invites original manuscripts reporting clinical and experimental work in vascular surgery for peer review. Articles may be submitted for the following sections of the journal: Clinical Research (reports of clinical series, new drug or medical device trials) Basic Science Research (new investigations, experimental work) Case Reports (reports on a limited series of patients) General Reviews (scholarly review of the existing literature on a relevant topic) Developments in Endovascular and Endoscopic Surgery Selected Techniques (technical maneuvers) Historical Notes (interesting vignettes from the early days of vascular surgery) Editorials/Correspondence
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