{"title":"Hospice news","authors":"","doi":"10.1177/104990910502200603","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Results of a national survey appearing in the September 2005 issue of Archives of Surgery indicate that most surgeons lack training in palliative care for cancer patients. Richard J. Bold, MD, and associates at the University of California/ Davis Medical Center surveyed 124 surgeons across the country to determine their experience, training, and attitudes toward palliative surgical management of patients with advanced malignancies. Seventy surveys were returned. “Given the vast differences in recommendations by the surgeons in our sample who were all trying to achieve the same goal,” said Bold, “I think that a standardized curriculum should be developed for educational purposes.” Eighty-four percent of respondents had received no palliative care education during their residencies, while those who did reported a mean length of training of six hours. Excluding seven trainees, slightly more than half of respondents had received additional palliative surgical training through continuing medical education sources. Nonetheless, the median length of career palliative care training was only four hours. With regard to treatment options when provided with four potential clinical scenarios, the respondents chose functional status, expected survival, and potential for pain and symptom relief as factors most influencing palliative treatment decisions. Significantly, no consensus was reached on treatment recommendations in three of the four scenarios. Surgeons who had received training in palliative care were somewhat more likely than other respondents to select surgical palliative interventions for patients in three of the scenarios and were significantly more likely to recommend hernia repair in the fourth scenario. “Education should form the basis of recommendations [for palliative surgical interventions] rather than personal experience,” the authors concluded. (Source: Archives of Surgery, September 2005, pp. 873-880.)","PeriodicalId":7716,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®","volume":"50 1","pages":"409 - 412"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2005-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/104990910502200603","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Results of a national survey appearing in the September 2005 issue of Archives of Surgery indicate that most surgeons lack training in palliative care for cancer patients. Richard J. Bold, MD, and associates at the University of California/ Davis Medical Center surveyed 124 surgeons across the country to determine their experience, training, and attitudes toward palliative surgical management of patients with advanced malignancies. Seventy surveys were returned. “Given the vast differences in recommendations by the surgeons in our sample who were all trying to achieve the same goal,” said Bold, “I think that a standardized curriculum should be developed for educational purposes.” Eighty-four percent of respondents had received no palliative care education during their residencies, while those who did reported a mean length of training of six hours. Excluding seven trainees, slightly more than half of respondents had received additional palliative surgical training through continuing medical education sources. Nonetheless, the median length of career palliative care training was only four hours. With regard to treatment options when provided with four potential clinical scenarios, the respondents chose functional status, expected survival, and potential for pain and symptom relief as factors most influencing palliative treatment decisions. Significantly, no consensus was reached on treatment recommendations in three of the four scenarios. Surgeons who had received training in palliative care were somewhat more likely than other respondents to select surgical palliative interventions for patients in three of the scenarios and were significantly more likely to recommend hernia repair in the fourth scenario. “Education should form the basis of recommendations [for palliative surgical interventions] rather than personal experience,” the authors concluded. (Source: Archives of Surgery, September 2005, pp. 873-880.)
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2005年9月出版的《外科档案》上的一项全国调查结果表明,大多数外科医生缺乏对癌症患者进行姑息治疗的培训。加利福尼亚大学/戴维斯医学中心的Richard J. Bold医学博士及其同事调查了全国124名外科医生,以确定他们对晚期恶性肿瘤患者姑息性手术治疗的经验、培训和态度。共收到70份调查问卷。博尔德说:“考虑到我们样本中外科医生的建议存在巨大差异,他们都在努力实现同样的目标。我认为,应该为教育目的制定一套标准化的课程。”84%的受访者在住院期间没有接受过姑息治疗教育,而那些接受过姑息治疗教育的人报告的平均培训时间为6小时。除7名受训人员外,略多于一半的答复者通过继续医学教育来源接受了额外的姑息外科培训。尽管如此,职业姑息治疗培训的中位数长度仅为4小时。当提供四种潜在的临床方案时,关于治疗方案,受访者选择功能状态、预期生存、疼痛和症状缓解的潜力作为最影响姑息治疗决策的因素。值得注意的是,在四种情况中的三种情况下,没有就治疗建议达成共识。在三种情况下,接受过姑息治疗培训的外科医生比其他受访者更有可能为患者选择手术姑息干预,而在第四种情况下,更有可能推荐疝气修复。作者总结道:“教育应该成为[姑息性手术干预]建议的基础,而不是个人经验。”(资料来源:《外科档案》,2005年9月,第873-880页)
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