The Effects of COVID-19 on General Surgery Residency Programs in the United States.

Kansas journal of medicine Pub Date : 2023-09-25 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.17161/kjm.vol16.20094
Katherine Foerster, Karl Fischer, Michael Nguyen, Brian W Gilbert, Karson R Quinn, Stephen D Helmer, George Philip
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Abstract

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic impacted multiple aspects of surgical education. This survey delineates steps taken by general surgery residency programs to meet changing patient-care needs while continuing to provide adequate education.

Methods: A survey was administered to program directors and coordinators of all United States general surgery residency programs to assess the early effects of the pandemic on residents from March 1 through May 31, 2020.

Results: Of 303 programs contacted, 132 (43.6%) completed the survey. Residents were asked to work in areas outside of their specialty at 27.3% of programs. Residency curriculum was changed in 35.6% of programs, and 76.5% of programs changed their academic conferences. Resident schedules were altered at a majority of programs to limit resident-patient exposure, increase ICU coverage, or improve resident utilization. Surgical caseloads decreased at 93.8% of programs; 31.8% of those programs reported concerns regarding residents' achieving the minimum case numbers required to graduate.

Conclusions: These results provided insight into the restructuring of general surgery residency programs during a pandemic and may be used to establish future pandemic response plans.

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新冠肺炎对美国普通外科住院计划的影响。
简介:新冠肺炎大流行影响了外科教育的多个方面。这项调查描述了普通外科住院医师项目在继续提供充分教育的同时,为满足不断变化的患者护理需求而采取的步骤。方法:对美国所有普通外科住院项目的项目主任和协调员进行了一项调查,以评估2020年3月1日至5月31日期间疫情对住院患者的早期影响。结果:在接触的303个项目中,132个(43.6%)完成了调查。27.3%的项目要求居民在专业以外的地区工作。35.6%的项目更改了住院课程,76.5%的项目更改学术会议。大多数项目都改变了住院时间表,以限制住院患者的暴露,增加ICU覆盖率,或提高住院患者的利用率。手术工作量减少了93.8%;31.8%的项目报告称,他们对居民达到毕业所需的最低病例数感到担忧。结论:这些结果为疫情期间普通外科住院医师计划的重组提供了见解,并可用于制定未来的疫情应对计划。
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