Michael T White1, Kathryn Welch. 1. Wayne State University, Department of Surgery, Detroit, MI, USA. mwhite@med.wayne.edu
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study was performed to assess the hypothesis that performance levels for Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Surgery (FLS) tasks were not dependent on trainee gender. METHODS: Initial and final task completion times for 4 FLS tasks performed by 132 novices (4th-year medical students and 1st-year residents) were collated by task type and compared by gender. RESULTS: All novices improved significantly with training (P > .001) on all tasks. Initial performance by men was better than by women but only reached significance for peg transfer and intracorporeal knot tying (P > .05). With training, women's performance became equivalent to that of men but showed a comparable or greater response to training. CONCLUSIONS: The gender-related differences noted in initial FLS task performance disappeared after training. Gender displayed no effect on FLS training outcomes. The use of initial FLS task performance levels, seemingly objective selection criteria, would introduce gender bias into the ranking process.
BACKGROUND: This study was performed to assess the hypothesis that performance levels for Fundamentals of Laparoscopic Surgery (FLS) tasks were not dependent on trainee gender. METHODS: Initial and final task completion times for 4 FLS tasks performed by 132 novices (4th-year medical students and 1st-year residents) were collated by task type and compared by gender. RESULTS: All novices improved significantly with training (P > .001) on all tasks. Initial performance by men was better than by women but only reached significance for peg transfer and intracorporeal knot tying (P > .05). With training, women's performance became equivalent to that of men but showed a comparable or greater response to training. CONCLUSIONS: The gender-related differences noted in initial FLS task performance disappeared after training. Gender displayed no effect on FLS training outcomes. The use of initial FLS task performance levels, seemingly objective selection criteria, would introduce gender bias into the ranking process.
Authors: Paul J Roch; Henriette M Rangnick; Julia A Brzoska; Laura Benner; Karl-Friedrich Kowalewski; Philip C Müller; Hannes G Kenngott; Beat-Peter Müller-Stich; Felix Nickel Journal: Surg Endosc Date: 2017-08-24 Impact factor: 4.584
Authors: Muhammad Abdullah Arain; Saleema Begum; Amir H Shariff; Sadaf Khan; K M Inam Pal; Muhammad Rizwan Khan; Muhammad Ali; Jan Ringers Journal: J Educ Health Promot Date: 2022-04-28
Authors: Jana Busshoff; Rabi R Datta; Thomas Bruns; Robert Kleinert; Bernd Morgenstern; David Pfister; Costanza Chiapponi; Hans F Fuchs; Michael Thomas; Caroline Gietzelt; Andrea Hedergott; Desdemona Möller; Martin Hellmich; Christiane J Bruns; Dirk L Stippel; Roger Wahba Journal: Surg Endosc Date: 2021-11-08 Impact factor: 3.453