Resident training experience with robotic assisted transabdominal preperitoneal inguinal hernia repair - 11/02/20

Abstract |
Background |
General surgery is the fastest growing field in the adoption of robotic assisted laparoscopic surgery. Here, we present the results of one institution’s experience in training surgical residents in robotic assisted transabdominal preperitoneal inguinal hernia repairs.
Methods |
Data were prospectively collected on patients undergoing robotic assisted laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair with residents. Data points included patient age, gender, complications, hernia difficulty, resident technical competency as measured by GEARS, Zwisch scores, operative time, and the number of robotic console cases reported by residents as primary surgeon.
Results |
Residents who performed >30 robotic cases had significantly higher mean modified GEARS scores (p ≤ .002). Residents who completed 10 or fewer robotic cases achieved significantly lower mean modified GEARS and Zwisch scores than those who completed 11 or more (p < .001).
Conclusions |
Resident competency and autonomy improve with increasing total robotic case load. Attending surgeons grant more autonomy to residents with higher competency scores.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Robotic inguinal hernia repairs are complex operations. |
• | Difficult to assess competency benchmarks in surgical residents. |
• | Residents with >30 robotic cases perform the best on most competency metrics. |
Keywords : Robotic surgery, Inguinal hernia repair, Transabdominal preperitoneal repair
Plan
Vol 219 - N° 2
P. 278-282 - février 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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