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Article Abstract

Introduction: Prior work has demonstrated utility in using operative time to measure surgeon learning for surgical stabilization of rib fractures (SSRF); however, no studies have used operative time to evaluate the benefit of proctoring in subsequent generations of surgeons. We sought to evaluate whether there is a difference in learning between an original series (TOS) of self-taught surgeons versus the next generation (TNG) of proctored surgeons using cumulative summation (CUSUM) analysis. We hypothesized that TNG would have a comparatively accelerated learning curve.

Methods: A single-center retrospective review of all SSRF at a level 1 trauma center was performed. Data were collected from the beginning of an operative chest injury program to include at least 2 y of TNG experience. Operative time was used to determine success and misstep based on prior methods. Learning curves using CUSUM analysis were calculated based on an anticipated success rate of 90% and compared between TOS and TNG groups.

Results: Over 7 y, 163 patients with a median Injury Severity Score of 24 underwent SSRF. Median operative time was 165 min with a 0.5 plate-to-fracture ratio. All three TOS surgeons experienced a positive slope indicative of early missteps for their first 15-20 cases. By contrast, all three TNG surgeons demonstrated a series of early successes resulting in negative CUSUM slopes which coincided with a period of proctoring. By the end of TNG series, the composite cumulative score was less than half of the TOS surgeon' scores.

Conclusions: Operative time continues to be a useful surrogate for observing SSRF learning curves. In a mature institutional program, proctored novice surgeons appear to have an accelerated learning curve compared to novice surgeons developing a new operative rib program.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2024.06.041DOI Listing

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