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A multi-institutional study from the US ROPE Consortium examining factors associated with directly entering practice upon residency graduation

Authors :
Austin C. Hammaker
Shah-Jahan M. Dodwad
Christen E. Salyer
Sasha D. Adams
Darci C. Foote
Felicia A. Ivascu
Sarah Kader
Jonathan S. Abelson
Motaz Al Yafi
Jeffrey M. Sutton
Savannah Smith
Lauren M. Postlewait
Stephen J. Stopenski
Jeffry T. Nahmias
Jalen Harvey
Deborah Farr
Zachary M. Callahan
Joshua A. Marks
Ali Elsaadi
Samuel J. Campbell
Christopher C. Stahl
Dennis J. Hanseman
Purvi Patel
Matthew R. Woeste
Robert C.G. Martin
Jitesh A. Patel
Melissa R. Newcomb
Kathriena Greenwell
Katherine M. Meister
James C. Etheridge
Nancy L. Cho
Carol R. Thrush
Mary K. Kimbrough
Bilal Waqar Nasim
Ross E. Willis
Brian C. George
Ralph C. Quillin
Alexander R. Cortez
Source :
Surgery. 172:906-912
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

There is concern regarding the competency of today's general surgery graduates as a large proportion defer independent practice in favor of additional fellowship training. Little is known about the graduates who directly enter general surgery practice and if their operative experiences during residency differ from graduates who pursue fellowship.Nineteen Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited general surgery programs from the US Resident OPerative Experience Consortium were included. Demographics, career choice, and case logs from graduates between 2010 to 2020 were analyzed.There were 1,264 general surgery residents who graduated over the 11-year period. A total of 248 (19.6%) went directly into practice and 1,016 (80.4%) pursued fellowship. Graduates directly entering practice were more likely to be a high-volume resident (43.1% vs 30.5%, P.01) and graduate from a high-volume program (49.2% vs 33.0%, P.01). Direct-to-practice graduates performed 53 more cases compared with fellowship-bound graduates (1,203 vs 1,150, P.01). On multivariable analysis, entering directly into practice was positively associated with total surgeon chief case volume (odds ratio = 1.47, 95% confidence interval 1.18-1.84, P.01) and graduating from a US medical school (odds ratio = 2.54, 95% confidence interval 1.45-4.44, P.01) while negatively associated with completing a dedicated research experience (odds ratio = 0.31, 95% confidence interval 0.22-0.45, P.01).This is the first multi-institutional study exploring resident operative experience and career choice. These data suggest residents who desire immediate practice can tailor their experience with less research time and increased operative volume. These data may be helpful for programs when designing their experience for residents with different career goals.

Details

ISSN :
00396060
Volume :
172
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a87b4a1d209ea2bb20ffc06df57bc131