The American Journal of Surgery
Volume 199, Issue 5 , Pages 652-656, May 2010

The changing face of the general surgeon: national and local trends in resident operative experience

Presented at the 96th Annual Meeting of the North Pacific Surgical Association, Seattle, WA, November 12–13, 2009. This paper represents the opinions of the authors only and does not represent the views of the US Department of Defense, the US Department of the Army, or Madigan Army Medical Center.

Department of Surgery, Madigan Army Medical Center, Tacoma, WA, USA

Received 7 November 2009; received in revised form 8 January 2010

Abstract 

Background

The authors hypothesized that the increasing use of nonoperative management, percutaneous and endoscopic intervention, minimally invasive surgery, and endovascular surgery has radically altered case mix and resident training.

Methods

A review was performed of the Nationwide Inpatient Sample and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education reports from 1993 to 2007 and of local resident operative logs for 2002 to 2008.

Results

For all nationwide procedures, there have been major increases in percutaneous interventions, angiographic embolizations, and endovascular surgery, with corresponding sharp declines in major open biliary, aortic, colon, and trauma cases. In training programs, there have been small decreases in total case numbers but major changes in the operative case mix at the expense of traditional open surgery. A profound decline in open vascular surgery is noted. At the authors' institution, similar radical changes in the operative case mix were demonstrated.

Conclusions

Nationwide trends toward the increased use of nonoperative, minimally invasive, endoscopic, and endovascular techniques are altering the operative experience of surgeons and residents in training. This may radically change the abilities and expectations for the field of general surgery and what it means to be a “general surgeon.”

Keywords: General surgery, Resident education, Training, Operative experience

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PII: S0002-9610(10)00046-2

doi:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2010.01.012

The American Journal of Surgery
Volume 199, Issue 5 , Pages 652-656, May 2010