Zachary J Senders1, Justin T Brady2, Husayn A Ladhani2, Jeffrey Marks3, John B Ammori4. 1. is a General Surgery Resident, Department of Surgery, University Hospitals (UH) Cleveland Medical Center. 2. is a General Surgery Resident, Department of Surgery, UH Cleveland Medical Center. 3. is Professor of Surgery and Associate Program Director, General Surgery Residency, UH Cleveland Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. 4. is Associate Professor of Surgery and Program Director, General Surgery Residency, UH Cleveland Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: General surgery residents may be underprepared for practice, due in part to declining operative autonomy during training. The factors that influence entrustment of autonomy in the operating room are unclear. OBJECTIVE: To identify and compare the factors that residents and faculty consider influential in entrustment of operative autonomy. METHODS: An anonymous survey of 29-item Likert-type scale (1-7, 1 = strongly disagree, 7 = strongly agree), 9 multiple-choice, and 4 open-ended questions was sent to 70 faculty and 45 residents in a large ACGME-approved general surgery residency program comprised of university, county, and VA hospitals in 2018. RESULTS: Sixty (86%) faculty and 38 (84%) residents responded. Faculty were more likely to identify resident-specific factors such as better resident reputation and higher skill level as important in fostering entrustment. Residents were more likely to identify environmental factors such as a focus on efficiency and a litigious malpractice environment as impeding entrustment. Both groups agreed that work hour restrictions do not decrease autonomy and entrustment does not increase risk to patients. More residents considered low faculty confidence level as a barrier to operative autonomy, while more faculty considered lower resident clinical skill as a barrier. Improvement in resident preparation for cases was cited as an important intervention that could enhance entrustment. CONCLUSIONS: Differences in perspectives exist between general surgery residents and faculty regarding entrustment of autonomy. Residents cite environmental and attending-related factors, while faculty cite resident-specific factors as most influential. Residents and faculty both agree that entrustment is integral to surgical training.
BACKGROUND: General surgery residents may be underprepared for practice, due in part to declining operative autonomy during training. The factors that influence entrustment of autonomy in the operating room are unclear. OBJECTIVE: To identify and compare the factors that residents and faculty consider influential in entrustment of operative autonomy. METHODS: An anonymous survey of 29-item Likert-type scale (1-7, 1 = strongly disagree, 7 = strongly agree), 9 multiple-choice, and 4 open-ended questions was sent to 70 faculty and 45 residents in a large ACGME-approved general surgery residency program comprised of university, county, and VA hospitals in 2018. RESULTS: Sixty (86%) faculty and 38 (84%) residents responded. Faculty were more likely to identify resident-specific factors such as better resident reputation and higher skill level as important in fostering entrustment. Residents were more likely to identify environmental factors such as a focus on efficiency and a litigious malpractice environment as impeding entrustment. Both groups agreed that work hour restrictions do not decrease autonomy and entrustment does not increase risk to patients. More residents considered low faculty confidence level as a barrier to operative autonomy, while more faculty considered lower resident clinical skill as a barrier. Improvement in resident preparation for cases was cited as an important intervention that could enhance entrustment. CONCLUSIONS: Differences in perspectives exist between general surgery residents and faculty regarding entrustment of autonomy. Residents cite environmental and attending-related factors, while faculty cite resident-specific factors as most influential. Residents and faculty both agree that entrustment is integral to surgical training.
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