Literature DB >> 8055384

General surgical practice patterns in Nova Scotia: the role of the "generalist" general surgeon.

P M Chiasson1, J D Henshaw, P D Roy.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the role of traditional "generalist" general surgeons in Nova Scotia.
DESIGN: An anonymous mail survey.
SETTING: The Province of Nova Scotia. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty-two active general surgeons listed on the Nova Scotia Provincial Medical Board Registry.
INTERVENTIONS: A questionnaire to compare the practice patterns of community surgeons, regional surgeons and tertiary care surgeons. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The availability of non-general-surgery subspecialty colleagues in the hospital setting, the extent of non-general-surgery subspecialty practices of the participating surgeons, the types of procedures they commonly perform and the adequacy of their general surgery training to meet their present practice requirements.
RESULTS: The questionnaire response rate was 79%. Community surgeons had few non-general-surgery subspecialty colleagues, and the majority maintained broad "generalist" general surgical practices. Regional surgeons had more non-general-surgery subspecialty colleagues, but many still had surgical practices that included the non-general-surgery subspecialties. Tertiary surgeons had adequate non-general-surgery subspecialty colleagues and maintained narrow general surgery practices.
CONCLUSIONS: In Nova Scotia, "generalist" general surgeons presently provide non-general-surgery subspecialty services in both regional and community hospital settings.

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Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8055384

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Surg        ISSN: 0008-428X            Impact factor:   2.089


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  4 in total

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