用一种更节俭、更接近同行、更环保的方式教授基本外科技能:混合方法研究。

Ben Smith, Christopher Paton, Prashanth Ramaraj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:英国皇家外科学院的基本外科技能(BSS)课程在英国外科培训生中普遍存在,但地理位置有限且费用昂贵。2019冠状病毒病大流行降低了培训质量。调查显示,日志完成率降低,受训人员流失率增加。当地以同伴为主导的教学已被证明能有效地以经济有效的方式提高对外科技能的信心。缺乏关于受训人员幸福感、招聘和保留的定性数据。目的:本研究旨在评估一种新的每周午餐BSS课程对定量和定性因素的影响。方法:设计每周一次的午餐BSS课程,以达到英国皇家外科学院BSS课程的效果,为期16周,重叠1次基础医生轮转。研究中心的所有卫生保健工作者都有资格参加。这项研究通过每周的全信托信息电子邮件进行宣传。课程内容包括打结、缝合、脓肿切开及引流、应用巴黎石膏固定骨折、关节穿刺及复位、腹壁闭合、基本腹腔镜技巧。医院食堂从当地屠夫那里采购多余的猪皮用于缝合,猪肚用于脓肿和腹壁缝合。使用了过时的手术设备。这项并行、嵌套、混合方法的研究包括描述性分析,在每次课程之前和之后,在4次课程迭代(2021年5月至2022年8月)中,对每项手术技能的感知改善评分进行分析。课程结束后,学生们完成了一份基于网络的自愿反馈表格,以5分的李克特量表对他们的表现和课程后的信心水平进行评分。我们还对自愿的半结构化学生访谈记录进行了定性专题分析,以了解免费参加、本地、每周、近同伴教学课程对感知幸福感、培训质量和对外科职业兴趣的影响。学生同意在本研究中使用反馈和访谈数据。研究中心伦理委员会要求伦理批准,但认为没有必要。结果:共64例应答。置信度从47%显著提高到73% (95% CI 15%-27%;P13=5.3117)在4次迭代中对所有手术技能的影响。在7个半结构化访谈中,100%(7/7)的参与者报告了感知幸福感的提高、培训价值的增加和对近同伴教学的积极态度,71%(5/7)的参与者更喜欢每周一次的本地教学。对外科职业的兴趣没有改变。结论:该课程在临床工作量方面是可行的,当地资源几乎没有成本,环境可持续,并且免费参加。该课程不仅每周为初级医生提供一次学习机会,而且还提供教学机会。同行主导的、分散的外科教育增加了信心,并对健康和培训的看法产生了积极影响。我们希望传播这门课程,导致在其他中心复制,完善和广泛实施。
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Teaching Basic Surgical Skills Using a More Frugal, Near-Peer, and Environmentally Sustainable Way: Mixed Methods Study.

Background: The Royal College of Surgeons Basic Surgical Skills (BSS) course is ubiquitous among UK surgical trainees but is geographically limited and costly. The COVID-19 pandemic has reduced training quality. Surveys illustrate reduced logbook completion and increased trainee attrition. Local, peer-led teaching has been shown to be effective at increasing confidence in surgical skills in a cost-effective manner. Qualitative data on trainee well-being, recruitment, and retention are lacking.

Objective: This study aims to evaluate the impact of a novel program of weekly, lunchtime BSS sessions on both quantitative and qualitative factors.

Methods: A weekly, lunchtime BSS course was designed to achieve the outcomes of the Royal College of Surgeons BSS course over a 16-week period overlapping with 1 foundation doctor rotation. All health care workers at the study center were eligible to participate. The study was advertised via the weekly, trust-wide information email. Course sessions included knot tying, suturing, abscess incision and drainage, fracture fixation with application of plaster of Paris, joint aspirations and reductions, abdominal wall closure, and basic laparoscopic skills. The hospital canteen sourced unwanted pig skin from the local butcher for suturing sessions and pork belly for abscess and abdominal wall closure sessions. Out-of-date surgical equipment was used. This concurrent, nested, mixed methods study involved descriptive analysis of perceived improvement scores in each surgical skill before and after each session, over 4 iterations of the course (May 2021 to August 2022). After the sessions, students completed a voluntary web-based feedback form scoring presession and postsession confidence levels on a 5-point Likert scale. Qualitative thematic analysis of voluntary semistructured student interview transcripts was also performed to understand the impact of a free-to-attend, local, weekly, near-peer teaching course on perceived well-being, quality of training, and interest in a surgical career. Students consented to the use of feedback and interview data for this study. Ethics approval was requested but deemed not necessary by the study center's ethics committee.

Results: There were 64 responses. Confidence was significantly improved from 47% to 73% (95% CI 15%-27%; P<.001; t13=5.3117) across all surgical skills over 4 iterations. Among the 7 semistructured interviews, 100% (7/7) of the participants reported improved perceived well-being, value added to training, and positivity toward near-peer teaching and 71% (5/7) preferred local weekly teaching. Interest in a surgical career was unchanged.

Conclusions: This course was feasible around clinical workloads, resourced locally at next to no cost, environmentally sustainable, and free to attend. The course offered junior doctors not only a weekly opportunity to learn but also to teach. Peer-led, decentralized surgical education increases confidence and has a positive effect on perceptions about well-being and training. We hope to disseminate this course, leading to reproduction in other centers, refinement, and wide implementation.

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