Is the operative autonomy granted to a resident consistent with operative performance quality

Procedural Learning and Safety Collaborative

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: We investigated attending surgeon decisions regarding resident operative autonomy, including situations where operative autonomy was discordant with performance quality. Methods: Attending surgeons assessed operative performance and documented operative autonomy granted to residents from 14 general surgery residency programs. Concordance between performance and autonomy was defined as “practice ready performance/meaningfully autonomous” or “not practice ready/not meaningfully autonomous.” Discordant circumstances were practice ready/not meaningfully autonomous or not practice ready/meaningfully autonomous. Resident training level, patient-related case complexity, procedure complexity, and procedure commonality were investigated to determine impact on autonomy. Results: A total of 8,798 assessments were collected from 429 unique surgeons assessing 496 unique residents. Practice-ready and exceptional performances were 20 times more likely to be performed under meaningfully autonomous conditions than were other performances. Meaningful autonomy occurred most often with high-volume, easy and common cases, and less complex procedures. Eighty percent of assessments were concordant (38% practice ready/meaningfully autonomous and 42% not practice ready/not meaningfully autonomous). Most discordant assessments (13.8%) were not practice ready/meaningfully autonomous. For fifth-year residents, practice ready/not meaningfully autonomous ratings (9.7%) were more frequent than not practice ready/meaningfully autonomous ratings (7.5%). Ten surgeons (2.3%) failed to afford residents meaningful autonomy on any occasion. Conclusion: Resident operative performance quality is the most important determinant in attending surgeon decisions regarding resident autonomy.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)566-570
Number of pages5
JournalSurgery (United States)
Volume164
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2018

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This project was supported in part by a grant from the American Board of Surgery, Jonathan P. Fryer, Principal Investigator.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Inc.

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