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Advanced Laparoscopic Fellowship and General Surgery Residency can Co-exist without Detracting from Surgical Resident Operative Experience Shanu N. Kothari,

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Presentation on theme: "Advanced Laparoscopic Fellowship and General Surgery Residency can Co-exist without Detracting from Surgical Resident Operative Experience Shanu N. Kothari,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Advanced Laparoscopic Fellowship and General Surgery Residency can Co-exist without Detracting from Surgical Resident Operative Experience Shanu N. Kothari, M.D., F.A.C.S. Thomas H. Cogbill, M.D., F.A.C.S. Colette T. O’Heron Michelle A. Mathiason, M.S.

2 Surgical Endoscopy (2001) 15:1066-1070.

3 47% of residents felt that additional training was necessary to perform advanced laparoscopic procedures Surgical Endoscopy (2001) 15:1066-1070. Rattner DW, et al.

4 47% of residents felt that additional training was necessary to perform advanced laparoscopic procedures 65% of respondents would pursue an additional year of advanced laparoscopic training if it were available Surgical Endoscopy (2001) 15:1066-1070. Rattner DW, et al.

5 1993: <10 programs 2004: 80 programs 2005: 91 programs 2006: 108 programs 2007: 127 programs * National Resident Matching Program. Results and Data. Specialties Matching Service 2008 Appointment Year. NRMP, February 2008 # of MIS Fellowships*

6 1993: <10 programs 2004: 80 programs 2005: 91 programs 2006: 108 programs 2007: 127 programs * National Resident Matching Program. Results and Data. Specialties Matching Service 2008 Appointment Year. NRMP, February 2008 # of MIS Fellowships*# of Bariatric Procedures

7 The Concern Residents Graduating with Suboptimal Advanced Laparoscopic Case Load More Advanced Laparoscopic Fellowships More Advanced Laparoscopic Fellows Competing for Cases

8 Objective To evaluate the impact of adding an advanced laparoscopic fellowship on general surgery residency case volume at our institution

9 Gundersen Lutheran 325 bed community-based teaching hospital ACGME–accredited general surgery residency since 1974 2 chief residents each year

10 Gundersen Lutheran August 2001, established a minimally invasive clinical bariatric surgery program In July 2003, initiated minimally invasive bariatric/advanced laparoscopic fellowship

11 Four Surgical Services Vascular Trauma Endocrine/oncology Minimally Invasive Surgery/Bariatric

12 Four Surgical Services –Ideally, there is a junior and senior resident assigned to each service –All chief residents spend three months on each service –The only MIS case exclusively performed by fellows is laparoscopic gastric bypasses –Fellows are allowed to perform non-bariatric advanced laparoscopic cases if the complexity of the procedure is beyond the skill level of a resident on the service, as determined by the attending surgeon, or the case is uncovered. Otherwise, all advanced laparoscopic cases are performed with the resident as “surgeon” and the attending or fellow as “teaching assistant”

13 Initiation of Laparoscopic Fellowship Program 200020042007 Resident Laparoscopic Case Load Resident + Fellow Laparoscopic Case Load

14 Statistical Analysis T-test was used to compare pre fellowship to post fellowship case numbers Statistical significance was defined as p<0.05

15 Fellows’ Experience Fellow Graduate Year Basic Laparoscopic Advanced Laparoscopic Non-Bariatric Advanced Laparoscopic Bariatric Total 20043140106177 20054276100218 20065066113229 2007308583198

16 Resident Case Volume Pre/Post-Fellowship 140.5 ± 19.4

17 Resident Case Volume Pre/Post-Fellowship * P=0.003 140.5 ± 19.4193.3 ± 34.5

18 Resident Case Volume Pre/Post-Fellowship * P=0.003 140.5 ± 19.4193.3 ± 34.5 77 ± 17.8

19 Resident Case Volume Pre/Post-Fellowship * P=0.003; **P=0.005 140.5 ± 19.4193.3 ± 34.5 77 ± 17.8113.3 ± 23.5

20 All Non-Bariatric Laparoscopic Cases per Surgeon during Graduating Year

21 *In addition to these laparoscopic cases, fellows performed a mean of 101 laparoscopic bariatric cases during their fellowship year.

22 Laparoscopic Inguinal Herniorrhaphy

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25 Laparoscopic Antireflux Surgery

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28 Laparoscopic Partial Colectomy

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31 Discussion

32 A high volume of basic and advanced laparoscopic procedures should be performed at the sponsoring institution to limit competition for those cases by residents and fellows

33 Discussion A high volume of basic and advanced laparoscopic procedures should be performed at the sponsoring institution to limit competition for those cases by residents and fellows Clear cut ground rules need to be established and followed – who is assigned to be surgeon, under what circumstances, and who is primarily responsible for perioperative management of each patient

34 Discussion A high volume of basic and advanced laparoscopic procedures should be performed at the sponsoring institution to limit competition for those cases by residents and fellows Clear cut ground rules need to be established and followed – who is assigned to be surgeon, under what circumstances, and who is primarily responsible for perioperative management of each patient Open communication and excellent working relationship between residency director and fellowship director is essential

35 Limitations

36 Our general surgery program is small, and the lack of a chief resident on the MIS service for 6 months of the year may positively affect our fellows’ operating experience and may not be applicable to large surgery programs that always have a chief resident on service

37 Limitations Our general surgery program is small, and the lack of a chief resident on the MIS service for 6 months of the year may positively affect our fellows’ operating experience and may not be applicable to large surgery programs that always have a chief resident on service Several MIS fellowships have more than one fellow present and this may dilute the exposure of a defined set of advanced MIS cases amongst residents and fellows even further

38 Limitations Our general surgery program is small, and the lack of a chief resident on the MIS service for 6 months of the year may positively affect our fellows’ operating experience and may not be applicable to large surgery programs that always have a chief resident on service Several MIS fellowships have more than one fellow present and this may dilute the exposure of a defined set of advanced MIS cases amongst residents and fellows even further The fellowship director makes it very clear that they cannot “steal” cases from the surgery residents; rather acting as a teaching assistant, unless the case is uncovered. As a result, our data may not be comparable to programs that do not have similar “ground rules” for the resident–fellow interactions

39 Conclusion General surgery resident experience with basic and non-bariatric advanced laparoscopic cases did not decrease with the addition of an advanced laparoscopic fellowship

40 Conclusion General surgery resident experience with basic and non-bariatric advanced laparoscopic cases did not decrease with the addition of an advanced laparoscopic fellowship Residents’ operative case volume during their chief year was not negatively impacted

41 Conclusion As a result of the cooperative efforts of the fellowship and residency directors as well as an expansion of the total number of laparoscopic cases performed at our institution due to changes in clinical practice, surgery residents reported an increase in the number of laparoscopic cases while a successful fellowship was established

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