Literature DB >> 31466894

The Value of Surgical Graduate Medical Education (GME) Programs Within An Integrated Health Care System.

Claire I Lauer1, Mohsen M Shabahang1, Brian Restivo1, Samantha Lane1, Sarah Hayek1, James Dove1, Halle B Ellison1, Erin Pica1, Evan J Ryer2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Surgical graduate medical education (GME) programs add both significant cost and complexity to the mission of teaching hospitals. While expenses tied directly to surgical training programs are well tracked, overall cost-benefit accounting has not been performed. In this study, we attempt to better define the costs and benefits of maintaining surgical GME programs within a large integrated health system.
DESIGN: We examined the costs, in 2018 US dollars, associated with the surgical training programs within a single health system. Total health system expenses were calculated using actual and estimated direct GME expenses (salary, benefits, supplies, overhead, and teaching expenses) as well as indirect medical education (IME) expenses. IME expenses for each training program were estimated by using both Medicare percentages and the Medicare Payment Advisor Commission study. The projected cost to replace surgical trainees with advanced practitioners or hospitalists was obtained through interviews with program directors and administrators and was validated by our system's business office.
SETTING: A physician lead, integrated, rural health system consisting of 8 hospitals, a medical school and a health insurance company. PARTICIPANTS: GME surgical training programs within a single health system's department of surgery.
RESULTS: Our health system's department of surgery supports 8 surgical GME programs (2 general surgery residencies along with residencies in otolaryngology, ophthalmology, oral-maxillofacial surgery, urology, pediatric dentistry, and vascular surgery), encompassing 89 trainees. Trainees work an average of 64.4 hours per week. Total health system cost per resident ranged from $249,657 to $516,783 based on specialty as well as method of calculating IME expenses. After averaging program costs and excluding IME and overhead expenses, we estimated the average annual cost per trainee to be $84,171. We projected that replacing our surgical trainees would require hiring 145 additional advanced practitioners at a cost of $166,500 each per year, or 97 hospitalists at a cost of $346,500 each per year. Excluding overhead, teaching and IME expenses, these replacements would cost the health system an estimated additional $16,651,281 or $26,119,281 per year, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Surgical education is an integral part of our health system and ending surgical GME programs would require large expansion of human resources and significant additional fiscal capital.
Copyright © 2019 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cost of graduate medical education; Health system costs; Practice-Based Learning and Improvement; Professionalism; Resident salary; Surgical education; Systems based practice

Year:  2019        PMID: 31466894     DOI: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2019.08.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Surg Educ        ISSN: 1878-7452            Impact factor:   2.891


  1 in total

Review 1.  Graduate medical education funding mechanisms, challenges, and solutions: A narrative review.

Authors:  Katherine He; Edward Whang; Gentian Kristo
Journal:  Am J Surg       Date:  2020-06-23       Impact factor: 2.565

  1 in total

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