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A Novel Approach to Assessing Technical Competence of Colorectal Surgery Residents

Authors :
Steven D. Wexner
Eric G. Weiss
Eric J. Dozois
Ann C. Lowry
Patricia L. Roberts
Najjia N. Mahmoud
Richard K. Reznick
Helen MacRae
Gerald A. Isenberg
Lisa Satterthwaite
Sandra de Montbrun
David J. Schoetz
Glenn T. Ault
Judith L. Trudel
Peter A. Cataldo
James W. Fleshman
Marcus J. Burnstein
Gary D. Dunn
Source :
Annals of Surgery. 258:1001-1006
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2013.

Abstract

To develop and evaluate an objective method of technical skills assessment for graduating subspecialists in colorectal (CR) surgery-the Colorectal Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill (COSATS).It may be reasonable for the public to assume that surgeons certified as competent have had their technical skills assessed. However, technical skill, despite being the hallmark of a surgeon, is not directly assessed at the time of certification by surgical boards.A procedure-based, multistation technical skills examination was developed to reflect a sample of the range of skills necessary for CR surgical practice. These consisted of bench, virtual reality, and cadaveric models. Reliability and construct validity were evaluated by comparing 10 graduating CR residents with 10 graduating general surgery (GS) residents from across North America. Expert CR surgeons, blinded to level of training, evaluated performance using a task-specific checklist and a global rating scale. The mean global rating score was used as the overall examination score and a passing score was set at "borderline competent for CR practice."The global rating scale demonstrated acceptable interstation reliability (0.69) for a homogeneous group of examinees. Both the overall checklist and global rating scores effectively discriminated between CR and GS residents (P0.01), with 27% of the variance attributed to level of training. Nine CR residents but only 3 GS residents were deemed competent.The Colorectal Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill effectively discriminated between CR and GS residents. With further validation, the Colorectal Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill could be incorporated into the colorectal board examination where it would be the first attempt of a surgical specialty to formally assess technical skill at the time of certification.

Details

ISSN :
00034932
Volume :
258
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32304d2a4862033bc3bc3e6c33ceecd2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0b013e31829b32b8