Literature DB >> 21884604

Intensive medical student involvement in short-term surgical trips provides safe and effective patient care: a case review.

Ira L Leeds1, Francis X Creighton, Matthew A Wheatley, Jana B Macleod, Jahnavi Srinivasan, Marie P Chery, Viraj A Master.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The hierarchical nature of medical education has been thought necessary for the safe care of patients. In this setting, medical students in particular have limited opportunities for experiential learning. We report on a student-faculty collaboration that has successfully operated an annual, short-term surgical intervention in Haiti for the last three years. Medical students were responsible for logistics and were overseen by faculty members for patient care. Substantial planning with local partners ensured that trip activities supplemented existing surgical services. A case review was performed hypothesizing that such trips could provide effective surgical care while also providing a suitable educational experience.
FINDINGS: Over three week-long trips, 64 cases were performed without any reported complications, and no immediate perioperative morbidity or mortality. A plurality of cases were complex urological procedures that required surgical skills that were locally unavailable (43%). Surgical productivity was twice that of comparable peer institutions in the region. Student roles in patient care were greatly expanded in comparison to those at U.S. academic medical centers and appropriate supervision was maintained. DISCUSSION: This demonstration project suggests that a properly designed surgical trip model can effectively balance the surgical needs of the community with an opportunity to expose young trainees to a clinical and cross-cultural experience rarely provided at this early stage of medical education. Few formalized programs currently exist although the experience above suggests the rewarding potential for broad-based adoption.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21884604      PMCID: PMC3224472          DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-4-317

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Res Notes        ISSN: 1756-0500


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3.  Inherent difficulties of measuring the burden of surgical disease in resource-poor settings.

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