Back to Search Start Over

Development of a Competence-Based Spine Surgery Fellowship Curriculum Set of Learning Objectives in Canada

Authors :
Douglas Hedden
Joel S. Finkelstein
Eugene Wai
Sean Christie
Jerome Paquet
Donald Chow
Eve C. Tsai
Robert Broad
Richard C. Fox
Jeremie Larouche
Hamilton Hall
Veronica M R Wadey
Kris Lundine
John Hurlbert
Andrew Nataraj
Christopher S. Bailey
Paul J. Moroz
Iain Dommisse
Michael G. Fehlings
Michael Goytan
Jan Splawinski
Albert Yee
Eric M. Massicotte
Timothy Carey
Michael P. Chapman
Scott Paquette
Charles G. Fisher
Jacques Bouchard
Henry Ahn
Brian Wheelock
Source :
Spine. 41(6)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN Modified-Delphi expert consensus method. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to develop competence-based spine fellowship curricula as a set of learning goals through expert consensus methodology in order to provide an educational tool for surgical educators and trainees. Secondarily, we aimed to determine potential differences among specialties in their rating of learning objectives to defined curriculum documents. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA There has been recent interest in competence-based education in the training of future surgeons. Current spine fellowships often work on a preceptor-based model, and recent studies have demonstrated that graduating spine fellows may not necessarily be exposed to key cognitive and procedural competencies throughout their training that are expected of a practicing spine surgeon. METHODS A consensus group of 32 spine surgeons from across Canada was assembled. A modified-Delphi approach refined an initial fellowship-level curriculum set of learning objectives (108 cognitive and 84 procedural competencies obtained from open sources). A consensus threshold of 70% was chosen with up to 5 rounds of blinded voting performed. Members were asked to ratify objectives into either a general comprehensive or focused/advanced curriculum. RESULTS Twenty-eight of 32 consultants (88%) responded and participated in voting rounds. Seventy-eight (72%) cognitive and 63 (75%) procedural competency objectives reached 70% consensus in the first round. This increased to 82 cognitive and 73 procedural objectives by round 4. The final curriculum document evolved to include a general comprehensive curriculum (91 cognitive and 53 procedural objectives), a focused/advanced curriculum (22 procedural objectives), and a pediatrics curriculum (22 cognitive and 9 procedural objectives). CONCLUSION Through a consensus-building approach, the study authors have developed a competence-based curriculum set of learning objectives anticipated to be of educational value to spine surgery fellowship educators and trainees. To our knowledge, this is one of the first nationally based efforts of its kind that is also anticipated to be of interest by international colleagues.

Details

ISSN :
15281159
Volume :
41
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Spine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f350169f766ab669825b5fadc1a97a7