1. Do resident's leadership skills relate to ratings of technical skill?
- Author
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Gannon SJ, Law KE, Ray RD, Nathwani JN, DiMarco SM, D'Angelo AD, and Pugh CM
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Clinical Decision-Making, Female, General Surgery standards, Humans, Male, Midwestern United States, Clinical Competence, General Surgery education, Internship and Residency standards, Interprofessional Relations, Intestines surgery, Leadership, Self Efficacy
- Abstract
Background: This study sought to compare general surgery research residents' survey information regarding self-efficacy ratings to their observed performance during a simulated small bowel repair. Their observed performance ratings were based on their leadership skills in directing their assistant., Methods: Participants were given 15 min to perform a bowel repair using bovine intestines with standardized injuries. Operative assistants were assigned to help assist with the repair. Before the procedure, participants were asked to rate their expected skills decay, task difficulty, and confidence in addressing the small bowel injury. Interactions were coded to identify the number of instructions given by the participants to the assistant during the repair. Statistical analyses assessed the relationship between the number of directional instructions and participants' perceptions self-efficacy measures. Directional instructions were defined as any dialog by the participant who guided the assistant to perform an action., Results: Thirty-six residents (58.3% female) participated in the study. Participants who rated lower levels of decay in their intraoperative decision-making and small bowel repair skills were noted to use their assistant more by giving more instructions. Similarly, a higher number of instructions correlated with lower perceived difficulty in selecting the correct suture, suture pattern, and completing the entire surgical task., Conclusions: General surgery research residents' intraoperative leadership skills showed significant correlations to their perceptions of skill decay and task difficulty during a bowel repair. Evaluating resident's directional instructions may provide an additional individualized intraoperative assessment metric. Further evaluation relating to operative performance outcomes is warranted., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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