Identifying and eliminating deficiencies in the general surgery resident core competency curriculum

Nicole M. Tapia, Allen Milewicz, Stephen E. Whitney, Michael K. Liang, Carla C. Braxton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Although the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education has defined 6 core competencies required of resident education, no consensus exists on best practices for reaching resident proficiency. Surgery programs must develop resourceful methods to incorporate learning. While patient care and medical knowledge are approached with formal didactics and traditional Halstedian educational formats, other core competencies are presumed to be learned on the job or emphasized in conferences. OBJECTIVES: To test the hypothesis that our residents lack a foundation in several of the nonclinical core competencies and to seek to develop a formal curriculum that can be integrated into our current didactic time, with minimal effect on resident work hours and rest hours. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Anonymous Likert-type scale needs assessment survey requesting residents within a large single general surgery residency program to rate their understanding, working knowledge, or level of comfort on the following 10 topics: negotiation and conflict resolution; leadership styles; health care legislation; principles of quality delivery of care, patient safety, and performance improvement; business of medicine; clinical practice models; role of advocacy in health care policy and government; personal finance management; team building; and roles of innovation and technology in health care delivery. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Proportions of resident responses scored as positive (agree or strongly agree) or negative (disagree or strongly disagree). RESULTS: In total, 48 surgery residents (70%) responded to the survey. Only 3 topics (leadership styles, team building, and roles of innovation and technology in health care delivery) had greater than 70%positive responses, while 2 topics (negotiation and conflict resolution and principles of quality delivery of care, patient safety, and performance improvement) had greater than 60% positive responses. The remaining topics had less than 40% positive responses, with the least positive responses on the topics business of medicine (13%[6 of 48]) and health care legislation (19% [9 of 48]). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: General surgery residents in our program do not report being knowledgeable or comfortable with several areas of the nonclinical Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education core competencies. We developed a formal health care policy and management curriculum, with integration into preexisting protected surgical didactic time. This curriculum fulfills educational requirements, without negatively affecting resident work hours and without increased expense to the department of surgery. Future studies measuring the effect of this integrated program on resident education, knowledge, and satisfaction are warranted.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)514-518
Number of pages5
JournalJAMA Surgery
Volume149
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2014

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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