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The Maturation of a Specialty: Workforce Projections for Endocrine Surgery Julie Ann Sosa, MA, MD, FACS Associate Professor of Surgery Sections of Oncologic and Endocrine Surgery Yale University School of Medicine New Haven, CT
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Endocrine glands Thyroid Parathyroid Adrenal glands Pancreas Background
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Rising incidence of endocrine disease Thyroid 6.6% of US population Thyroid cancer: 1.5% of all new cancers 240% increase over 30 yrs Fastest growing cancer in women Parathyroid Incidence: 23.7/100,000 1.5% Americans ≥65 yrs (3.9 million) Adrenal Adrenal incidentalomas: 5-12% of CTs, autopsies
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Many endocrine diseases are treated surgically. Thyroidectomy
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Minimally invasive surgery under local anesthesia in the outpatient setting. Parathyroidectomy
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Laparoscopy has improved outcomes. Adrenalectomy
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Volume : Outcome Association High-volume surgeons have better outcomes. Fewer complications Shorter length of hospital stay Lower hospital costs Better outcomes for: Thyroidectomy Parathyroidectomy Adrenalectomy (Sosa et al, 2007, 2008 using HCUP)
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Volume: Cost Association
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Volume: Length of Stay Association
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Volume: Complication Rate Association
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Disparities in Outcomes Inequity in access to high-volume surgeons Minorities Elderly and super-elderly Lower socioeconomic status Southern U.S., rural areas Government insurance (Medicare, Medicaid) -Sosa et al 2007, 2008 using HCUP
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Access to High-Volume Surgeons, By Race
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Access to High-Volume Surgeons, By Geographic Region
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Problem Despite more specialty-trained endocrine surgeons, the increasing incidence of endocrine disorders raises the question: Will there continue to be compromised access to high-volume endocrine surgeons?
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Objective To project endocrine surgeon supply and demand over the next several decades in the U.S.
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Methods - Supply Survey of endocrine surgery fellows Demographics Clinical experience during residency, fellowship, practice General surgery residency – ACGME Endocrine surgery experience HCUP-NIS, 2004 Surgeon volume of endocrine procedures in the U.S.
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Comparison of Endocrine Surgery Experience
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Volume distribution of surgeons performing endocrine procedures, 2004* 75 18 6 1 24 25 26 *Using HCUP dataset
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Methods - Demand U.S. Census Bureau population projections HCUP-NIS / SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results) Procedures abstracted using ICD-9 procedure,diagnosis codes Incidence rates for benign and malignant disease
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Sensitivity Analyses Supply Annual retirement rate of 2.3% Projected number of specialty-trained endocrine surgeons Demand U.S. Census bureau population projections Changes in disease incidence HCUP SEER
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Projected numbers of high-volume endocrine surgeons in the U.S., 2004-2030
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Age-adjusted estimates of endocrine procedures in the U.S., 2000-2030
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Projections of total endocrine procedures performed in the U.S., 2004-2030
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Conclusions Incidence of endocrine disease will continue to increase. Specialty-trained endocrine surgeons will increase in number, but The majority of endocrine procedures will continue to be performed by lower-volume surgeons.
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Implications: Graduate Medical Education Standardization of training across endocrine surgery fellowships Case distribution Overall volume Certification
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Implications: Practice Patient, provider education NY State cardiac reporting system: publicly available data on mortality following CABG by hospital, surgeon Centers of excellence Association with endocrine surgery fellowships Leapfrog: hospital volume to guide referrals
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Implications: Policy Improve access to high-volume surgeons Geographic distribution Incentives for MDs Patient indirect costs Lower SES status Government insurance (Medicare/Medicaid)
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