33 results on '"OP James"'
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2. Team engagement theory: a trainee perspective of trainer clinical leadership and engagement
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CR Bowman, OP James, O Luton, DBT Robinson, L Hopkins, K Mellor, RJ Egan, and WG Lewis
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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3. The Sinatra Doctrine: bespoke approaches to academic research in surgery
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K Mellor, AGMT Powell, O Luton, OP James, RJ Egan, and WG Lewis
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General Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Academic scholarly credentials are now obtained in two broad ways: out of programme research (OOPR) experience via bespoke funding (BF) or a higher degree (HD) funded by run-through fellowships (academic clinical fellow/lecturer in England or Wales Clinical Academic Track [WCAT]). The aim of this study was to determine the relative academic credentials achieved related to HD route, surgical specialty and topic. Methods Fifty-four postgraduate trainees engaged in HD study were followed and the primary outcome measures were HD completion, publication number and Hirsch index (HI). Results There were 38 BF trainees and 16 WCAT trainees. General surgical trainees were more likely to choose postgraduate research (n = 37, 68.5%) than other specialties (n = 17, 31.5%). Similarly, trainees in general surgery were more likely to choose the BF route than the WCAT pathway (94.6% vs 12.5%, (p Conclusions HD routes appear equivalent although specialty related HI outcomes varied over fourfold. Trainees and training programme directors alike should be aware of these outcomes when planning OOPR training. Surgical training is multifaceted and should result in a competent clinician, able scholar, first class communicator, health advocate and well rounded professional. 1 Surgical research has served as the foundation for evidence-based clinical practice as long ago as Galen. 2 Nevertheless, in the UK and since the inception of Modernising Medical Careers, out of programme research (OOPR) experience has lost its allure. 3 , 4 Indeed, other distinguishing credentials are available, such as subspecialty clinical attachments, and qualifications in management, education and leadership.
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- 2022
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4. Prognostic value of interview rank when hiring for health: staff and nonsense or significant metric?
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K Mellor, DBT Robinson, O Luton, OP James, AGMT Powell, L Hopkins, S Hemington-Gorse, A Lala, RJ Egan, and WG Lewis
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General Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Core surgical training recruitment works via a centralised national selection process, during which each applicant is assigned an interview performance rank. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relative performance of core surgical trainees related to interview rank (CSTIR) in a single UK statutory education body. Methods Data for two cohorts of core surgical trainees (87 individuals) were analysed prospectively over two years (2018–2021). The primary outcome measures were Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) examination pass and specialty national training number (NTN) appointment. Results The overall MRCS pass rate was 67.8% and the NTN success rate was 43.7%. CSTIR Conclusions CSTIR was independently associated with conversion to higher surgical specialty NTN, suggesting that the current recruitment process predicts likely success in training.
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- 2022
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5. Ministers of Mercy and Compassion: Bringing Healing and Hope to the World—A Call for a New Ministry for Religious Communities.
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OP, Ignatius Perkins and OP, James M. Sullivan
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- 2022
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6. Stumping Freedom: Divine Causality and the Will
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Rooney OP, James Dominic, primary
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- 2015
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7. Fidel y la Religión: Preaching before Princes.
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OP, James Alison
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- 1986
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8. Author response to: Comment on: Personal protective equipment-induced systemic hypercapnic hypoxaemia: translational implications for impaired cognitive-clinical functional performance.
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Luton OW, Stacey BS, Mellor K, James OP, Williams IM, Warren N, Egan RJ, Bailey DM, and Lewis WG
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- 2023
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9. Enhanced Stress Resilience Training for UK Surgical Trainees; Effect and Evolution Evaluated.
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Luton OW, James OP, Mellor K, Eley C, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, Barlow E, Lebares CC, Lewis WG, and Egan RJ
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Introduction: Core Surgical Training (CST) programs are associated with high burnout. This study aimed to assess the influence of Enhanced Stress Resilience Training (ESRT) over a 2-year period in a single UK Statutory Education Body., Method: CSTs participated in 5-weeks of formal ESRT to address work stressors. The primary outcome measure was career progression related to curriculum metrics and National Training Number (NTN) appointment. Secondary measures related to burnout using validated psychological inventories., Results: Of 42 CSTs, 13 engaged fully with ESRT (31.0%; male 8, female 5, median age 28 year.), 11 engaged partially, and 18 did not. ESRT engagement was associated with better NTN appointment (ESRT 8/13 (61.5%) vs. not 1/18 (5.6%), p = 0.025), less burnout [aMBI; mean 5.14 (SD ± 2.35) vs. 3.14 (±2.25), F 6.637, p = 0.002, η
p 2 =0.167], less stress [PSS-10; 19.22 (±5.91) vs. 15.79 (±5.47), F 8.740, p < 0.001, ηp 2 =0.200], but more mindfulness [CAMS-R; 19.22 (±5.91) vs. 20.57 (±2.93), F 3.201, p = 0.047, ηp 2 =0.084]. On multivariable analysis, Improving Surgical Training (run-through CST) program (OR 5.2 (95% CI 1.42-28.41, p = 0.022), MRCS pass (OR 17.128 (95% CI 1.48-197.11, p = 0.023) and ESRT engagement (OR 13.249, 95% CI 2.08-84.58, p = 0.006) were independently associated with NTN success., Discussion: ESRT was associated with less stress and burnout, better mindfulness, and most importantly 13-fold better career progression., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Data, analytic methods, and study materials will be made available to other researchers on request from the corresponding author., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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10. A retrospective cohort study of differential attainment, COVID and chaos: taking the difference out of a terrible trinity.
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James OP, Mellor K, Luton O, Robinson DBT, Walsh L, Hemington-Gorse S, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Clinical Competence, Educational Measurement, United Kingdom epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Surgeons education
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Background: This study aimed to evaluate core surgical training (CST) differential attainment related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), gender and ethnicity. The hypothesis was that COVID-19 adversely influenced CST outcomes., Methods: A retrospective cohort study of 271 anonymised CST records was undertaken at a UK Statutory Education Body. Primary effect measures were Annual Review of Competency Progression Outcome (ARCPO), Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) examination pass and Higher Surgical Training National Training Number (NTN) appointment. Data were collected prospectively at ARCP and analysed with non-parametric statistical methods in SPSS., Results: CSTs numbering 138 completed training pre-COVID and 133 peri-COVID. ARCPO 1, 2 and 6 were 71.9% pre-COVID versus 74.4% peri-COVID ( P =0.844). MRCS pass rates were 69.6% pre-COVID versus 71.1% peri-COVID ( P =0.968), but NTN appointment rates diminished (pre-COVID 47.4% vs. peri-COVID 36.9%, P =0.324); none of the above varied by gender or ethnicity. Multivariable analyses by three models revealed: ARCPO was associated with gender [m:f 1:0.87, odds ratio (OR) 0.53, P =0.043] and CST theme (Plastics vs. General OR 16.82, P =0.007); MRCS pass with theme (Plastics vs. General OR 8.97, P =0.004); NTN with the Improving Surgical Training run-through programme (OR 5.00, P <0.001). Programme retention improved peri-COVID (OR 0.20, P =0.014) with pan University Hospital rotations performing better than Mixed or District General-only rotations (OR 6.63, P =0.018)., Conclusion: Differential attainment profiles varied 17-fold, yet COVID-19 did not influence ARCPO or MRCS pass rates. NTN appointment fell by one-fifth peri-COVID, but overall training outcome metrics remained robust despite the existential threat., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
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- 2023
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11. Differential attainment in higher surgical training: scoping pan-specialty spectra.
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Luton OW, Mellor K, Robinson DBT, Barber Z, James OP, Powell AGMT, Hemington-Gorse S, Walsh L, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Pregnancy, Male, Humans, Female, Education, Medical, Graduate, Ethnicity, Educational Measurement, Clinical Competence, United Kingdom, Medicine, Surgeons
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Introduction: This study aimed to evaluate differential attainment during higher surgical training (HST; all specialties) related to three ethnic cohorts: White UK (WUKG), Black and Minority Ethnic UK Graduates (BMEUKG), and International Medical Graduates (IMG)., Method: Anonymised records of 266 HSTs (126 WUKG, 65 BMEUKG, 75 IMG; 7 years) in a single UK Statutory Education Body were examined. Primary effect measures were Annual Record of Competency Progression Outcome (ARCPO) and Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons (FRCS) pass., Results: ARCPOs related to ethnicity and specialty were similar with the exception of general surgery (GS) trainees, four of whom received ARCPO 4 (GS 4.9% (75% BME; p=0.025) vs all other 0%). ARCPO 3 was commoner in women (22/76, (28.9%) than men 27/190 (14.2%), OR 2.46, p=0.006). FRCS pass rates (WUKG vs BMEUKG vs IMG) were 76.9%, 52.9% and 53.9% respectively (p=0.064) but unrelated to gender (M 70.4% vs F 64.3%). On multivariable analyses: ARCPO 3 was associated with Female gender and Maternity Leave (OR 8.05, p=0.001); FRCS pass with ethnicity (OR 0.21, p=0.028) and Hirsch Indices of ≥5 (OR 11.17, p=0.001)., Conclusion: Differential attainment was plain with BMEUKG FRCS performance almost a third poorer than WUKG, and women twofold more likely to receive adverse ARCPOs, with return from statutory leave independently associated with training extension. Focused counter measures targeted at non-operative technical skills (including academic reach), Keeping in Touch, Return to Work, and re-induction programmed support are urgently needed for trainees at risk., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Postgraduate Medical Journal. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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12. Personal protective equipment-induced systemic hypercapnic hypoxaemia: translational implications for impaired cognitive-clinical functional performance.
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Luton OW, Stacey BS, Mellor K, James OP, Williams IM, Warren N, Egan RJ, Bailey DM, and Lewis WG
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- Humans, Male, Female, Cross-Over Studies, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Cognition, Personal Protective Equipment adverse effects, Hypercapnia, Hypoxia, Headache
- Abstract
Background: Personal protective equipment (PPE) adversely affects pulmonary gas exchange and may result in systemic hypercapnic hypoxaemia and headache. This study aimed to determine what extent PPE affects cerebral symptoms, global cerebral blood flow, and cognitive functional performance., Methods: Higher surgical trainees participated in a randomized, repeated-measures, crossover study, completing 60 min of laparoscopic surgical simulation in both standard operating attire and type 3 PPE. Measurements were collected at baseline and after 60 min of simulation. The primary outcome measure was headache. Headache was examined using the validated visual analogue scale (VAS) and Environmental Symptoms Questionnaire C (ESQ-C), global cerebral blood flow with duplex ultrasonography, and visuospatial and executive gross/fine motor function with grooved peg board (GPB) and laparoscopic bead (LSB) board tasks., Results: Thirty-one higher surgical trainees (20 men, 11 women) completed the study. Compared with standard operating attire, PPE increased headache assessment scores (mean(s.d.) VAS score 3.5(5.6) versus 13.0(3.7), P < 0.001; ESQ-C score 1.3(2.0) versus 5.9(5.1), P < 0.001) and was associated with poorer completion times for GPB-D (61.4(12.0) versus 71.1(12.4) s; P = 0.034) and LSB (192.5(66.9) versus 270.7(135.3) s; P = 0.025) tasks. Wearing PPE increased heart rate (82.5(13.6) versus 93.5(13.0) beats/min; P = 0.022) and skin temperature (36.6(0.4) versus 37.1(0.5)°C; P < 0.001), but decreased peripheral oxygen saturation (97.9(0.8) versus 96.8(1.0) per cent; P < 0.001). Female higher surgical trainees exhibited higher peripheral oxygen saturation across all conditions. No differences were observed in global cerebral blood flow as a function of attire, time or sex., Conclusion: Despite no marked changes in global cerebral blood flow, type 3 PPE was associated with increased headache scores and cerebral symptoms (VAS and ESQ-C) alongside impaired executive motor function highlighting the clinical implications of PPE-induced impairment for cognitive-clinical performance., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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13. Prognostic significance of drivers at work and learning styles in surgical training.
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Mellor K, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, James OP, Luton O, Brown C, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Humans, Male, Female, Prognosis, Educational Status, Surveys and Questionnaires, Learning, Surgeons
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Purpose of the Study: Drivers at work (DW) and Learning Styles (LS) refer to contentious theories that aim to account for differential career development yet seldom feature in assessment. This study aimed to quantify the influence of core surgical trainees' (CST) DW and LS on career progress., Study Design: DW questionnaires and Kolb LS inventories were distributed to 168 CSTs during five consecutive induction boot camps in a single-statutory education body. Primary outcome measures were membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS) examination and national training number (NTN) success., Results: Of 108 responses received (response rate 64.3%), 64.8% were male and 35.2% female (p=0.003). DW spectrum was: please people (25.0%), be perfect (21.3%), hurry up (18.5%), be strong (13.9%) and try hard (0%, p<0.001). DW was either equivocal (n=14) or not provided (n=9) by 21.3% of CSTs. LS were: converging (34.3%), accommodating (28.7%), diverging (23.1%) and assimilating (13.9%, p=0.021). Men were more likely to be convergers (29/70, 41.4%), and women divergers (15/38, 39.5%, p=0.018) also preferring team-based LS (accommodating/diverging, 26/38 (68.4%) vs 30/70 (42.9%), p=0.010). MRCS success was not associated with DW (p=0.329) or LS (p=0.459). On multivariable analysis, NTN success was associated with LS (accommodators 64.5%, divergers 32.0%, OR 10.90, p=0.014), scholarly activity (OR 1.71, p=0.001), improving surgical training programme (OR 36.22, p=0.019) and universal ARCP 1 outcome (OR 183.77, p<0.001)., Conclusions: LS are associated with important differences in career progress with accommodator twofold more likely than diverger to achieve NTN., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2022
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14. FRCS differential attainment related to region and specialty: retrospective cohort study.
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James OP, Mellor K, Brown C, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies
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- 2022
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15. Prognostic significance of competition ratios in surgical specialty training selection.
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Mellor K, Robinson DB, Luton O, James OP, Powell AGMT, Hopkins L, Hemington-Gorse S, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Male, Humans, Female, Prognosis, Education, Medical, Graduate, Educational Status, United Kingdom, Specialties, Surgical education, Neurosurgery
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Background: A competition ratio (CR) indicates the ratio of total applications for a training post when compared with numbers of specialty posts available. This study aimed to evaluate CRs' influence on National Training Number (NTN) selection in a single UK Statutory Education Body., Methods: Consecutive core surgical trainees numbering 154 (105 men, 49 women; median years since graduation: four) were studied over a 6-year period. Annual specialty specific CRs were obtained from Health Education England's website, and primary outcome measure was UK NTN appointment., Results: Overall NTN appointment was 45.5%. Median CR was 2.36; range Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery 0.70 (2020) to Neurosurgery 22.0 (2020). Multivariable analysis revealed that NTN success was associated with: CR (OR 0.46, p=0.003), a single scientific publication (OR 6.25, p=0.001), cohort year (2019, OR 12.65, p=0.003) and Universal Annual Review of Competence Progression Outcome 1 (OR 45.24, p<0.001). CRs predicted NTN appointment with a Youden index defined critical ratio of 4.42; 28.6% (n=8) versus 49.2% (n=62), p=0.018., Conclusion: CRs displayed 30-fold variation, with CRs below 4.42 associated with twofold better NTN promotion, but strong clinical competence and academic reach again emerged as the principal drivers of career advancement., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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16. Surgical curriculum concordance: requiem for the educational dream.
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Luton O, James OP, Mellor K, Powell A, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, Egan R, and Lewis W
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- Clinical Competence, Education, Medical, Graduate, Educational Measurement, Educational Status, Humans, Certification, Curriculum
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This study aimed to analyse the degree of relative variation in speciality-specific competencies required for Certification of Completion of Training (CCT) set by the UK Joint Committee for Surgical Training (JCST) 2021 curriculum. Regulatory body guidance related to operative and non-operative surgical skill competencies required for CCT were analysed and compared. Wide inter-speciality variation was demonstrated in the minimum number of logbook cases (median 815; range 54 to 2100), indexed operations (8; 5 to 24) and procedure-based assessments (35; 6 to 110). Academic competencies related to peer-reviewed publications, communications to learned societies and audits were aligned at zero, zero and three across specialities, respectively. Mandatory courses have been standardised with Advanced Trauma Life Support being the sole pre-requisite CCT for all. JCST certification guidelines have broadly standardised competency domains, yet large discrepancies persist regarding operative indicative numbers and assessments. This article serves as a definitive CCT guide regarding prevailing changes., Competing Interests: Competing interests: OPJ was supported by a joint research fellowship from Royal College of Surgeons England and HEIW., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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17. Gongs galore: phaleristic study of the relative risk of a healing art related New Year Honour.
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Mellor K, Powell AG, James OP, Robinson DB, Hopkins L, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Female, Humans, Male, Risk, Workforce, Awards and Prizes, General Practice, Physicians
- Abstract
Objectives: To compare proportional representation of healthcare specialty workers, in receipt of New Year Honours (NYHs) and examine system bias., Design: Observational study of UK honours system including comparative analysis of proportional representation of the UK medical workforce., Participants: Recipients of NYHs from 2010 to 2019., Main Outcome Measures: Absolute risk of receiving an NYH, related to medical specialty, gender and geographical region. Relative risk (RR) of receiving an NYH for services to healthcare related to specialty., Results: 11 207 NYHs were bestowed, with 368 (3.3%) awarded to healthcare professionals: 212 (57.6%) women, 156 (42.4%) men. The RR of a healthcare professional receiving an NYH was 0.76 (95% CI 0.68 to 0.84, p<0.001) when compared with the remaining UK workforce. Doctors received most NYHs (n=181), with public health, clinical oncology and general medicine specialties most likely to be rewarded (RR 20.35 (95% CI 9.61 to 43.08, p<0.001), 8.43 (95% CI 2.70 to 26.30, p<0.001) and 8.22 (95% CI 6.22 to 10.86, p<0.001)), respectively; anaesthetists received fewest NYHs (RR 0.52 (95% CI 0.13 to 2.10), p=0.305). Men were more likely to receive NYHs than women (OR 0.44, 95% CI 0.36 to 0.54; p<0.001). Two hundred and fifty-four NYHs (69.0%) were bestowed on residents of England (60, 16.3% London), 49 (13.3%) Scotland (p=0.003), 39 (10.6%) Wales (p<0.001) and 26 (7.1%) Northern-Ireland (p<0.001)., Conclusions: Relative risk of receiving an NYH varied over 150-fold by specialty, twofold by gender and threefold by geographical location. Public health physicians are perceived to be the pick of the parade., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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18. Trainee burnout: when does the fire start?
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Robinson DBT, James OP, Hopkins L, Brown C, Powell A, Abdelrahman T, Egan RJ, and Lewis W
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Workload, Burnout, Professional epidemiology, Internship and Residency, Occupational Stress psychology, Physicians psychology
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Burnout is an increasingly recognised phenomenon in acute healthcare specialities and associated with depersonalisation, ill health and training programme attrition. This study aimed to quantify contributory physiological variables that may indicate stress in newly qualified doctors., Study Design: Post Graduate Year 1 doctors (n=13, 7 f, 6 m) were fitted with a VivaLNK wellness device during four prior induction days, followed by their first 14 days work as qualified doctors. Minute-by-minute Heart Rate (HR), Respiratory Rate (RR), and Stress Index (SI) data were correlated with Maslach Burnout Inventories, Short Grit Scales (SGS) and clinical rota duties: Induction vs Normal Working-Day (NWD) versus On-call shift., Results: In a total 125 recorded shift episodes, on comparing Induction versus NWD versus On-call shift work, no variation was observed in HR above baseline (25.47 vs 27.14 vs 24.34, p=0.240), RR above baseline (2.21 vs 1.86 vs 1.54, p=0.126) or SI (32.98 vs 38.02 vs 35.47, p=0.449). However, analysis of participant-specific temporal SIs correlated with shift-related clinical duties; that is, study participants who were most stressed during a NWD, were also more stressed during Induction (R
2 0.442, p=0.026), and also during On-call shifts (R2 0.564, p=0.012). Higher SGS scores were inversely related to lower SIs (coefficient -32.52, 95% CI -45.881 to 19.154, p=0.001)., Conclusion: Stress and burnout stimulus appear to start on day one of induction for susceptible PGY1 doctors, and continues into front-line clinical work irrespective of shift pattern. Short Grit Scale questionnaires appear an effective tool to facilitate targeted stress countermeasures., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2022
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19. Strategic organisational skills predict surgical training success.
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James OP, Robinson DBT, Hopkins L, Bowman C, Powell A, Brown C, Hemington-Gorse S, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Data Collection, Educational Status, Efficiency, Humans, Prospective Studies, Clinical Competence, Simulation Training organization & administration, Surgeons
- Abstract
Introduction: Surgical career progression is determined by examination success and Annual Review of Competence Progression (ARCP) outcome, yet data on organisational skills are sparse. This study aimed to determine whether organisational skills related to Core Surgical Training (CST) outcome. Primary outcome measures include operative experience, publications, examination success (Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons or the Diploma in Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (MRCS/DO-HNS)) and ARCP outcome., Methods: The study was conducted prospectively at three consecutive CST induction boot camps (2017-2019) providing clinical and simulation training for 125 trainees. Arrival time at course registration was the selected surrogate for organisational skills. Trainees were advised to arrive promptly at 8:45 for registration and that the course would start at 9:00. Trainee arrival times were grouped as follows: early (before 8:45), on time (8:45-8:59am) or late (after 9:00). Arrival times were compared with primary outcome measures., Setting: Health Education and Improvement Wales' School of Surgery, UK., Results: Median arrival time was 8:53 (range 7:55-10:03), with 29 trainees (23.2%) arriving early, 63 (50.4%) on-time and 33 (26.4%) late. Arrival time was associated with operative experience (early vs late; 206 vs 164 cases, p=0.012), publication (63.2% vs 18.5%, p=0.005), MRCS/DO-HNS success (44.8% vs 15.2%, p=0.029), ARCP outcome (86.2% vs 60.6% Outcome 1, p=0.053), but not National Training Number success (60.0% vs 53.3%, p=0.772)., Conclusions: Better-prepared trainees achieved 25% more operative experience, were four-fold more likely to publish and pass MRCS, which aligned with consistent desirable ARCP outcome. Timely arrival at training events represents a skills-composite of travel planning and is a useful marker of strategic organisational skills., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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20. Author response to: Personal protective equipment impairs pulmonary gas exchange causing systemic hypercapnia-hypoxaemia and cerebral hyperperfusion-induced cephalalgia.
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James OP, Stacey B, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, Luton O, Williams IM, Egan RJ, Bailey DM, and Lewis WG
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- Headache, Humans, Hypoxia, Personal Protective Equipment, Hypercapnia, Pulmonary Gas Exchange
- Published
- 2021
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21. The Leaning Tower of Pasta: Lessons in Team Performance and Creativity From a Core Surgical Training Boot Camp Design Challenge.
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Eley C, Mellor K, Luton O, James OP, Bowman CR, Robinson DB, Powell AG, Hopkins L, Hemington-Gorse S, Egan RJ, Pollitt MJ, and Lewis WG
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- Curriculum, Educational Measurement, Leadership, Patient Care Team, Clinical Competence, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
Aims: Unity of effort is an important component of strategic leadership and management theory associated with Core Surgical Training (CST) outcome. The aim was to determine the impact of team diversity on task completion: a creative design challenge, during CST Boot camp., Methods: Attendees (n = 44) at a single Statutory Education Body's CST Boot camp were stratified into teams related to specialty theme, and set a design challenge as described by Peter Skillman, to build the tallest free-standing tower out of spaghetti (20 pieces), tape (1 m), and string (1 m), with a marshmallow on top in 18 minutes. Primary outcome measure was tower height., Results: Five teams (50%) completed the task with the tallest tower measuring 70 cm (median 51, range 0-70). Median satisfaction with the simulation exercise was 4 (2-5) on a scale of 0 to 5, with 5 corresponding with highest satisfaction. Successful task completion was associated with team surgical specialty (p = 0.032), ethnicity ratio (p = 0.010,), and gender ratio (p = 0.003), respectively. On multivariable analysis, only team gender ratio was independently associated with tower height (Hazard ratio 0.515, 95% confidence interval 0.350-0.759, p = 0.001)., Conclusion: Modern leadership theory emphasizes the important dynamic relationship between individual team members, the team, and task completion. General surgery themed teams with a gender mix were most successful in completing the design challenge; whether relative simulation performance predicts strategic organizational skill and career progression will be the next question., (Copyright © 2021 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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22. Trainee perspective of the causes of stress and burnout in surgical training: a qualitative study from Wales.
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Robinson DBT, Luton O, Mellor K, James OP, Hopkins L, Powell AG, Hemington-Gorse S, Harries RL, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Burnout, Psychological, Female, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Wales, Burnout, Professional epidemiology, State Medicine
- Abstract
Objectives: Stress and burn-out among surgical trainees has been reported most prevalent in core surgical trainees (CST) and female trainees in particular. This study aimed to identify factors perceived by CSTs to be associated with stress and burnout in those at risk., Design: An open-ended questionnaire was distributed to 79 CSTs and two researchers categorised responses independently, according to Michie's model of workplace stress., Setting: A UK regional postgraduate medical region (Wales)., Participants: Sixty-three responses were received; 42 males, 21 females. The response rate was 79.7%., Results: Inter-rater reliability was good (k=0.792 (79.2%), p<0.001). The most common theme of Michie's model related to CST stress and burnout was career development, with most statements associated with curriculum, examination and academic demands required to attain a CST certificate of completion of training, and higher surgical national training number appointment. This was closely followed by those intrinsic to the job with recurrent discussion around the difficulties balancing work perceived to be service provision (ward work and on-calls), outpatient clinic and operative experience. Conversely, the most common themes relevant to stress and burnout among female trainees were associated with relationships at work (primarily the male-dominated nature of surgery), extraorganisational factors (family-work life balance) and individual characteristics (personality and physiological differences)., Conclusion: CSTs' perceptions regarding the causes of National Health Service related stress and burnout are numerous, and these findings provide a basis for the development of targeted stressor counter-measures to improve training and well-being., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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23. Enhanced stress-resilience training for surgical trainees.
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Luton OW, James OP, Mellor K, Eley C, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, Lebares CC, Powell AGMT, Lewis WG, and Egan RJ
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- Adult, Anxiety prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Depression prevention & control, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Mindfulness, Pandemics, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Work Schedule Tolerance, Burnout, Professional prevention & control, Curriculum, General Surgery education, Resilience, Psychological, Stress, Psychological prevention & control, Surgeons psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Core surgical training programmes are associated with a high risk of burnout. This study aimed to assess the influence of a novel enhanced stress-resilience training (ESRT) course delivered at the start of core surgical training in a single UK statutory education body., Method: All newly appointed core surgical trainees (CSTs) were invited to participate in a 5-week ESRT course teaching mindfulness-based exercises to develop tools to deal with stress at work and burnout. The primary aim was to assess the feasibility of this course; secondary outcomes were to assess degree of burnout measured using Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) scoring., Results: Of 43 boot camp attendees, 38 trainees completed questionnaires, with 24 choosing to participate in ESRT (63.2 per cent; male 13, female 11, median age 28 years). Qualitative data reflected challenges delivering ESRT because of arduous and inflexible clinical on-call rotas, time pressures related to academic curriculum demands and the concurrent COVID-19 pandemic (10 of 24 drop-out). Despite these challenges, 22 (91.7 per cent) considered the course valuable and there was unanimous support for programme development. Of the 14 trainees who completed the ESRT course, nine (64.3 per cent) continued to use the techniques in daily clinical work. Burnout was identified in 23 trainees (60.5 per cent) with no evident difference in baseline MBI scores between participants (median 4 (range 0-11) versus 5 (1-11), P = 0.770). High stress states were significantly less likely, and mindfulness significantly higher in the intervention group (P < 0.010); MBI scores were comparable before and after ESRT in the intervention cohort (P = 0.630, median 4 (range 0-11) versus 4 (1-10))., Discussion: Despite arduous emergency COVID rotas ESRT was feasible and, combined with protected time for trainees to engage, deserves further research to determine medium-term efficacy., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.)
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- 2021
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24. Personal protective equipment impairs pulmonary gas exchange causing systemic hypercapnia-hypoxaemia and cerebral hyperperfusion-induced cephalalgia.
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James OP, Stacey B, Hopkins L, Robinson DBT, Luton O, Williams IM, Egan RJ, Bailey DM, and Lewis WG
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- Adult, Blood Flow Velocity physiology, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Cross-Over Studies, Humans, Middle Cerebral Artery physiopathology, Monitoring, Physiologic, Oximetry, Pulmonary Gas Exchange, Skin Temperature, Headache etiology, Hypercapnia etiology, Hypoxia etiology, Personal Protective Equipment adverse effects
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- 2021
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25. Predictive value of Altmetric score on citation rates and bibliometric impact.
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Robinson DBT, Powell AGMT, Waterman J, Hopkins L, James OP, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Humans, Journal Impact Factor, Logistic Models, ROC Curve, Bibliometrics, Evidence-Based Medicine, General Surgery, Periodicals as Topic
- Abstract
Background: Bibliometric and Altmetric analyses provide different perspectives regarding research impact. This study aimed to determine whether Altmetric score was associated with citation rate independent of established bibliometrics., Methods: Citations related to a previous cohort of 100 most cited articles in surgery were collected and a 3-year interval citation gain calculated. Citation count, citation rate index, Altmetric score, 5-year impact factor, and Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine levels were used to estimate citation rate prospect., Results: The median interval citation gain was 161 (i.q.r. 83-281); 74 and 62 articles had an increase in citation rate index (median increase 2.8 (i.q.r. -0.1 to 7.7)) and Altmetric score (median increase 3 (0-4)) respectively. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis revealed that citation rate index (area under the curve (AUC) 0.86, 95 per cent c.i. 0.79 to 0.93; P < 0.001) and Altmetric score (AUC 0.65, 0.55 to 0.76; P = 0.008) were associated with higher interval citation gain. An Altmetric score critical threshold of 2 or more was associated with a better interval citation gain when dichotomized at the interval citation gain median (odds ratio (OR) 4.94, 95 per cent c.i. 1.99 to 12.26; P = 0.001) or upper quartile (OR 4.13, 1.60 to 10.66; P = 0.003). Multivariable analysis revealed only citation rate index to be independently associated with interval citation gain when dichotomized at the median (OR 18.22, 6.70 to 49.55; P < 0.001) or upper quartile (OR 19.30, 4.23 to 88.15; P < 0.001)., Conclusion: Citation rate index and Altmetric score appear to be important predictors of interval citation gain, and better at predicting future citations than the historical and established impact factor and Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine quality descriptors., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.)
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- 2021
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26. Egalitarianism in surgical training: let equity prevail.
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Robinson DBT, Hopkins L, James OP, Brown C, Powell AG, Abdelrahman T, Hemington-Gorse S, Walsh L, Egan RJ, and Lewis W
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- Analysis of Variance, Clinical Competence, Data Collection, Ethnicity education, Humans, United Kingdom, Education methods, Education standards, Education, Medical, Graduate methods, Education, Medical, Graduate standards, Education, Medical, Graduate statistics & numerical data, Educational Measurement methods, Educational Measurement statistics & numerical data, Educational Status, Foreign Medical Graduates education, Foreign Medical Graduates statistics & numerical data, General Surgery education
- Abstract
This study aimed to quantify core surgical trainee (CST) differential attainment (DA) related to three cohorts; white UK graduate (White UKG) versus black and minority ethnic UKG (BME UKG) versus international medical graduates (IMGs). The primary outcome measures were annual review of competence progression (ARCP) outcome, intercollegiate Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (iMRCS) examination pass and national training number (NTN) selection. Intercollegiate Surgical Curriculum Programme (ISCP) portfolios of 264 consecutive CSTs (2010-2017, 168 white UKG, 66 BME UKG, 30 IMG) from a single UK regional post graduate medical region (Wales) were examined. Data collected prospectively over an 8-year time period was analysed retrospectively. ARCP outcomes were similar irrespective of ethnicity or nationality (ARCP outcome 1, white UKG 60.7% vs BME UKG 62.1% vs IMG 53.3%, p=0.395). iMRCS pass rates for white UKG vs BME UKG vs IMG were 71.4% vs 71.2% vs 50.0% (p=0.042), respectively. NTN success rates for white UKG vs BME UKG vs IMG were 36.9% vs 36.4% vs 6.7% (p=0.023), respectively. On multivariable analysis, operative experience (OR 1.002, 95% CI 1.001 to 1.004, p=0.004), bootcamp attendance (OR 2.615, 95% CI 1.403 to 4.871, p=0.002), and UKG (OR 7.081, 95% CI 1.556 to 32.230, p=0.011), were associated with NTN appointment. Although outcomes related to BME DA were equitable, important DA variation was apparent among IMGs, with iMRCS pass 21.4% lower and NTN success sixfold less likely than UKG. Targeted counter measures are required to let equity prevail in UK CST programmes., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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27. Surgical training rotation design: effects of hospital type, rotation theme and duration.
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Robinson DBT, Hopkins L, James OP, Brown C, Powell AGMT, Hemington-Gorse S, Abdelrahman T, Lewis WG, and Egan RJ
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- Curriculum, Female, Hospitals, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Program Development, Program Evaluation, United Kingdom, Clinical Competence, Consultants statistics & numerical data, Education, Medical, Continuing organization & administration, Specialties, Surgical education, Workplace organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Entrants into UK surgical specialty training undertake a 2-year programme of core surgical training, rotating through specialties for varying lengths of time, at different hospitals, to gain breadth of experience. This study aimed to assess whether these variables influenced core surgical trainee (CST) work productivity., Methods: Intercollegiate Surgical Curriculum Programme portfolios of consecutive CSTs between 2016 and 2019 were examined. Primary outcome measures were workplace-based assessment (WBA) completion, operative experience and academic outputs (presentations to learned societies, publications and audits)., Results: A total of 344 rotations by 111 CSTs were included. Incremental increases in attainment were observed related to the duration of core surgical training rotation. The median number of consultant-validated WBAs completed during core surgical training were 48 (range 0-189), 54 (10-120) and 75 (6-94) during rotations consisting of 4-, 6- and 12-month posts respectively (P < 0·001). Corresponding median operative caseloads (as primary surgeon) were 84 (range 3-357), 110 (44-394) and 134 (56-366) (P < 0·001) and presentations to learned societies 0 (0-12), 0 (0-14) and 1 (0-5) (P = 0·012) respectively. Hospital type and specialty training theme were unrelated to workplace productivity. Multivariable analysis identified length of hospital rotation as the only factor independently associated with total WBA count (P = 0·001), completion of audit (P = 0·015) and delivery of presentation (P = 0·001) targets., Conclusion: Longer rotations with a single educational supervisor, in one training centre, are associated with better workplace productivity. Consideration should be given to this when reconfiguring training programmes within the arena of workforce planning., (© 2020 The Authors. BJS Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Journal of Surgery Society.)
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- 2020
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28. Biosensors, Biomarkers and Biometrics: a Bootcamp Perspective.
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James OP, Robinson DBT, Hopkins L, Bowman C, Powell AGMT, Brown C, Bailey DM, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
- Abstract
Introduction: Competitive physical performance is routinely monitored by wearable technology (biosensors), yet professional healthcare is not, despite high prevalence of trainee stress and burnout, notwithstanding the corresponding risk to patient safety. This study aimed to document the physiological stress response of UK Core Surgical Trainees (CSTs) during simulation training., Methods: CSTs (n=20, 10 male) were fitted with Vital Scout Wellness Monitors (VivaLNK, Campbell, California, USA) for an intensive 3-day training bootcamp. In addition to physiological parameters, CST demographics, event diaries and Maslach Burnout Inventory scores were recorded prospectively during exposure to three scenarios: interactive lectures, clinical skills simulation and non-technical (communication) training., Results: Baseline heart rate (BHR, 60 bpm (range 39-81 bpm)) and baseline respiratory rate (14/min (11-18/min)) varied considerably and did not correlate (rho 0.076, p=0.772). BHR was associated with weekly exercise performed (66 bpm (<1 hour) vs 43 bpm (>5 hour), rho -0.663, p=0.004). Trainee response (standardised median heart rate vs BHR) revealed heart rate was related proportionately to lectures (71 bpm, p<0.001), non-technical skills training (79 bpm, p<0.001) and clinical skills simulation (88 bpm, p<0.001). Respiratory rate responded similarly (p<0.001 in each case). Heart rate during clinical skills simulation was associated with emotional exhaustion (rho 0.493, p=0.044), but maximum heart rate was unrelated to CSTs' perceived peak stressors., Discussion: Stress response, as derived from positive sympathetic heart rate drive varied over two-fold, with a direct implication on oxygen uptake and energy expenditure, and highlighting the daily physical demands placed upon clinicians., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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29. Proof of surgical publication prowess: prospective observational study of factors associated with surrogate markers of academic reach.
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Robinson DBT, Powell AGMT, Hopkins L, James OP, Abdelrahman T, Egan R, and Lewis WG
- Subjects
- Academic Success, Certification, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, United Kingdom, Biomedical Research, Faculty, Medical standards, General Surgery, Periodicals as Topic statistics & numerical data, Publications statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In the UK, general surgery higher surgical trainees (HSTs) must publish at least three peer-reviewed scientific articles (as first, second or corresponding author) to qualify for certification of completion of training (CCT). This study aimed to identify the factors associated with success in this arena., Methods: Deanery rosters supplemented with data from the Intercollegiate Surgical Curriculum Programme, PubMed and ResearchGate were used to identify the profiles of consecutive HSTs. Primary outcomes were publication numbers at defined points in higher training (speciality training year (ST) 3-8); secondary outcomes were the Hirsch index and ResearchGate scores., Results: Fifty-nine consecutive HSTs (24 women, 35 men) were studied. The median publication number was 3 (range 0-30). At least three published articles were obtained by 30 HSTs (51 per cent), with 19 (38 per cent) of 50 HSTs achieving this by ST4 (of whom 15 (79 per cent) had undertaken out of programme for research (OOPR) time) and 24 (80 per cent) by ST6. Thirteen HSTs (22 per cent) (ST3, 6; ST4, 4; ST5, 2; ST8, 1) had yet to publish at the time of writing. OOPR was associated with achieving three publications (24 of 35 (69 per cent) versus 6 of 24 (25 per cent) with no formal research time; P = 0·001), higher overall number of publications (median 6 versus 1 respectively; P < 0·001), higher ResearchGate score (median 23·37 versus 5·27; P < 0·001) and higher Hirsch index (median 3 versus 1; P < 0·001). In multivariable analysis, training grade (odds ratio (OR) 1·89, 95 per cent c.i. 0·01 to 3·52; P = 0·045) and OOPR (OR 6·55, 2·04 to 21·04; P = 0·002) were associated with achieving three publications., Conclusion: If CCT credentials are to include publication profiles, HST programmes should incorporate research training in workforce planning., (© 2020 The Authors. BJS Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Journal of Surgery Society.)
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- 2020
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30. Consumer-grade biosensor validation for examining stress in healthcare professionals.
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Hopkins L, Stacey B, Robinson DBT, James OP, Brown C, Egan RJ, Lewis WG, and Bailey DM
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- Adult, Energy Metabolism, Health Personnel, Humans, Male, Respiratory Rate, Stress, Physiological, Wearable Electronic Devices, Biosensing Techniques instrumentation, Biosensing Techniques methods, Exercise physiology, Monitoring, Physiologic instrumentation, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Stress, Psychological diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: A high prevalence of stress and burnout has been reported among healthcare professionals; however, the current tools utilized to quantify such metrics are not in keeping with doctors' busy lifestyles, and moreover do not comply with infection prevention policies. Given that increased stress can subsequently impact both the healthcare profession and the patient in care, this study aimed to assess the validity of a wearable biosensor to monitor and manage stress experienced by healthcare professionals., Methods: In all, 12 healthy, male volunteers completed an incremental exercise protocol to volitional exhaustion, which aimed to induce physiological stress in a graded manner. A wearable consumer-grade biosensor (Vital Scout, VivaLNK, Inc.) was used to measure stress, energy expenditure, respiration rate, and activity throughout the exercise protocol. These variables were validated against online breath-by-breath analysis (MedGraphics Ultima Series)., Results: When compared against online "gold standard" measurements, the Vital Scout biosensor demonstrated a high level of accuracy to measure energy expenditure (r = .776, p < .001) and respiration rate (r = .744, p < .001). The V ˙ O 2 increase observed during the incremental exercise test was associated with the Vital Scout biosensor's measurement of activity (r = .777, p < .001). In contrast, there was a poor relationship between the changes in V ˙ O 2 and the Vital Scout biosensor's ability to detect stress (r = -.195, p = .013)., Conclusion: The Vital Scout biosensor provided an accurate assessment of energy expenditure and respiration when compared to the "gold standard" assessment of these parameters. Biosensors have the potential to measure stress and deserve further research in the peri-hospital environment., (© 2020 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.)
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- 2020
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31. Stress and Burnout in Training; Requiem for the Surgical Dream.
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Robinson DBT, James OP, Hopkins L, Brown C, Bowman C, Abdelrahman T, Pollitt MJ, Egan RJ, Bailey DM, and Lewis WG
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- Adult, Burnout, Psychological, Female, Health Personnel, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Burnout, Professional epidemiology, Physicians
- Abstract
Objective: Burnout among trainee doctors is common with as many as two-thirds reporting poor health. This study aimed to assess burnout in a cohort of UK core and higher general surgical trainees., Design: The Maslach Burnout Inventory for Medical Personnel was distributed to 158 surgical trainees to evaluate emotional exhaustion (EE), depersonalization (DP), and personal accomplishment (PA). High EE (≥27) and DP (≥10), low PA (≤33) scores were taken to indicate burnout., Setting: A single UK (Wales) Deanery., Participants: One hundred responses were received; 65 core surgical trainees, 31 Higher Surgical Trainees (HST), and 4 not specified., Results: Median EE, DP, and PA scores were 22.0 (range 2-50), 7.5 (0-25), and 36.0 (19-47), respectively. High burnout by domain was: EE (n = 33), DP (n = 39), PA (n = 34), with 59% of trainees demonstrating burnout in ≥1 one domain, with strong interdomain correlation (EE:DP r = 0.351, p < 0.001; EE:PA r = -0.455, p < 0.001; DP:PA r = -0.446, p < 0.001). Female gender (p = 0.020), core surgical training grade (p = 0.012), and being childless (p = 0.033) were independently associated with higher levels of EE; whereas HST grade (p = 0.007), age >30 years (p = 0.010), married/partner status (p = 0.001), and parenthood (p = 0.015), were associated with lower levels of burnout with regard to DP. Binary logistic regression revealed lower burnout in all domains to be associated with HST status (hazard ratio 0.116, 95% confidence interval 0.014-0.980, p = 0.048) and male gender (hazard ratio 4.365, (1.246-15.293), p = 0.021)., Conclusions: Burnout among surgical trainees was common in at least 1 Maslach Burnout Inventory domain. Urgent counter measures are required to protect the health and wellbeing of trainees at risk, which ought to be associated with commensurate improvement in patient safety., (Copyright © 2019 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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32. Variations in competencies needed to complete surgical training.
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Wood S, James OP, Hopkins L, Harries R, Robinson DBT, Brown CM, Abdelrahman T, Egan RJ, and Lewis WG
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- Advisory Committees standards, Guidelines as Topic, Specialties, Surgical standards, United Kingdom, Certification standards, Clinical Competence standards, Education, Medical, Graduate standards, Specialties, Surgical education
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to analyse the degree of relative variation in specialty-specific competencies required for certification of completion of training (CCT) by the UK Joint Committee on Surgical Training., Methods: Regulatory body guidance relating to operative and non-operative surgical skill competencies required for CCT were analysed and compared., Results: Wide interspecialty variation was demonstrated in the required minimum number of logbook cases (median 1201 (range 60-2100)), indexed operations (13 (5-55)), procedure-based assessments (18 (7-60)), publications (2 (0-4)), communications to learned associations (0 (0-6)) and audits (4 (1-6)). Mandatory courses across multiple specialties included: Training the Trainers (10 of 10 specialties), Advanced Trauma Life Support (6 of 10), Good Clinical Practice (9 of 10) and Research Methodologies (8 of 10), although no common accord was evident., Discussion: Certification guidelines for completion of surgical training were inconsistent, with metrics related to minimum operative caseload and academic reach having wide variation., (© 2019 The Authors. BJS Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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33. A recurrent lump in the groin poses a diagnostic problem.
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James OP, Singh R, and Stephenson BM
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- Hernia, Femoral complications, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain etiology, Recurrence, Surgical Mesh, Treatment Outcome, Hernia, Femoral diagnostic imaging, Hernia, Femoral surgery
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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