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Operative Volume in the New Era: A Comparison of Total Resident Operative Volume Pre vs. Post 80-Hour Work Week Restriction Implementation Pamela J. Bruce, M.D., Stephen D. Helmer, Ph.D., Jacqueline S. Osland, M.D., Alex Ammar, M.D. Department of Surgery, The University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita Wichita, Kansas
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ACGME 2003 Duty Hour Restrictions In-house call no more than every third night One day off per week (averaged over 4 weeks) 24-hour limit (6-hour extension) 10 hours off between shifts <80 work week average
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Impact on operative experience Jarman 2004-projected losses of 100- 200 cases Mendoza 2005-10-25% reductions predicted by general surgery program directors
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Studies Showing Stable Operative Volume Bland 2005- no difference in total or chief resident volume Ferguson 2005- no change in total operative volume and an increase in chief resident operative volume Schneider 2007-increase in operative volume totals, especially for PGY1&2’s
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Studies Showing Negative Impact on Operative Volume Carlin et al. 2007- significant decrease in operative volume for PGY1, 2, and 4 residents and a decrease in first assist and teaching assist volume Damadi et al. 2007- overall decrease in both chief and total operative cases Kairys 2008-10% of residents at risk for not meeting the 750 total case requirement
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No previous published study has evaluated operative volume of general surgery residents who completed their entire residency after implementation of work-hour restrictions
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Study Objective Determine the impact of the duty hour restrictions (DHR) on general surgery resident operative volume in a general surgery residency program over the course of an entire “DHR” residency
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Methods IRB-approved retrospective review Final operative logs of graduated general surgery residents University of Kansas-Wichita -6 residents per year Control group:2001, 2002, 2003 Study group: 2008, 2009 19 ACGME Defined Categories Operative Volumes Non-operative trauma excluded, leaving 18 categories for comparison
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Results Operative volumes in 12/18 defined categories were not significantly affected Operative volume in 1/ 18 defined categories (Laparoscopic- Basic) was positively affected Operative volumes in 4/18 defined categories were negatively affected Head/Neck Trauma Thoracic Plastics
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Results Pamela J. Bruce, M.D., Stephen D. Helmer, Ph.D., Jacqueline S. Osland, M.D., Alex Ammar, M.D. Department of Surgery, The University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita Wichita, Kansas Before Duty Hour RestrictionAfter Duty Hour Restrictions 2001, 2002, 20032008, 2009 Number of Chief ResidentsMinimum RRC Requirements1712P Value Head and Neck2579.766.50.0326 * Skin/ Soft Tissue/ Breast245054.70.3785 Alimentary Tract72119.5122.30.7852 Abdomen65165.8192.50.0536 Liver48.5100.3651 Pancreas36.46.60.8062 Vascular44159.4140.80.2741 Endocrine833.837.40.2319 Trauma- Operative1026.213.50.0002 * Trauma- Non operative20---41.1--- Thoracic1545.432.50.0164 * Pediatrics2027.231.40.1268 Plastics520.113.80.0301 * Endoscopy85269.8250.80.5644 Laparoscopic- Basic60166.2231.30.0001 * Laparoscopic- Complex2560.767.50.2921 Teaching Cases---15.99.50.1418 TOTAL CHIEF CASES150268.7253.20.4278 TOTAL MAJOR CASES750119311090.2719
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Results Program changes made to accommodate DHR Night float system PGY3 and PGY1 residents Trauma service changes Cessation of resident coverage at 1 of the 2 level I trauma centers in the community with care provided subsequently by attendings and physician extenders Team concept of trauma coverage with two teams (PGY 2/4, PGY2/5) covering alternating 24 hour periods for 2 month rotations
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Discussion Trauma-number of cases decreased by 52% (26 to 13) Deletion of resident coverage at one Level I Trauma Center, substantially decreasing the amount of trauma call taken by residents over the course of the training program Increasing role of non-operative management for the care of trauma patients
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Discussion Head/Neck – number of cases decreased by 16% (79 to 66) Majority of cases recorded in this category were tracheostomies of which the majority are performed on the trauma rotation
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Discussion Thoracic - number of cases decreased by 28% (45 to 32) Decrease in number of months on the cardiothoracic rotation from 6 to 2 Migration of cases to a specialty heart hospital
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Discussion Plastics - number of cases decreased by 31% (20 to 13) No major change in the educational structure of the plastic surgery experience Decrease may be a factor of an anomaly of interest in plastic surgery in the control group Migration of cases to outpatient facilities
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Discussion Limitations Single institutional study of case volume involving a limited number of residents Operative volumes and duty hours are self-reported Confounding factors affecting case totals other than duty hours Defined categories do not fully reflect complexity of operative experience
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Conclusions Resident operative volume at our institution’s general surgery residency program has been largely unaffected by implementation of the 80-hour work week Residencies in general surgery can be structured in a manner to allow for compliance with duty hour regulations while maintaining the required operative volume as outlined by the ACGME defined categories
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