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Published in: World Journal of Surgery 2/2008

01-02-2008

An Update: The Operative Experience in Adrenal, Pancreatic, and Other Less Common Endocrine Diseases of U.S. General Surgery Residents

Authors: David Le, Shahzeer Karmali, Jay K. Harness, Brett C. Sheppard

Published in: World Journal of Surgery | Issue 2/2008

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Abstract

Background

A prior study that examined the operative experience of general surgery residents in endocrine surgery for the academic years 1986–1987 to 1993–1994 found this training to be inadequate due to low operative volume.

Methods

To evaluate how the development of minimally invasive endocrine surgery might alter this outcome, we reviewed more recent data from the Resident Statistic Summaries (Report C) of the Residency Review Committee from 1994–1995 to 2003–2004.

Results

The main outcome measures were total number of residents and programs and the volume and distribution of operations performed. For adrenalectomy, the average number of cases per resident was 1.46; for endocrine pancreas, the average was 0.14. The most common number of any of these procedures performed by U.S. graduates was zero.

Conclusion

Reports from postgraduate training in laparoscopic or endocrine surgery suggest that these fellowships may provide the necessary additional operative experience.
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Metadata
Title
An Update: The Operative Experience in Adrenal, Pancreatic, and Other Less Common Endocrine Diseases of U.S. General Surgery Residents
Authors
David Le
Shahzeer Karmali
Jay K. Harness
Brett C. Sheppard
Publication date
01-02-2008
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
World Journal of Surgery / Issue 2/2008
Print ISSN: 0364-2313
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2323
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-007-9179-z

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