• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
The Association for Surgical Education

The Association for Surgical Education

Impacting Surgical Education Globally

  • About
    • By-Laws
    • Contact the ASE
    • Leadership
    • Past Presidents
    • Standing Committees
    • Global Surgical Education-Journal of the ASE
    • ASE Strategic Plan 2023-2026
  • Join!
  • Meeting
    • Annual Meeting Information
    • ASE Fall Meeting & Courses
    • Call For Abstracts
      • Scientific Sessions
      • Candlelight Session
      • Multi-Institutional Research Submissions
      • Thinking Out of the Box
      • Workshop and Panel Submissions
    • Institutional Members & Sponsors
      • 2024 ASE Institutional Members and Sponsors
    • Exhibits and Commercial Promotion Opportunities
      • 2024 ASE Industry, Foundation and Society Sponsors
      • 2024 Surgical Education Week Exhibitors
    • Meetings Archives
    • Media Gallery
  • Awards & Programs
    • Academy of Clerkship Directors
    • Academic Program Administrator Certification in Surgery
    • 2023-2024 Association for Surgical Education Curriculum in Education Innovation and Teaching (ASCENT)
    • ASE/APDS: Collaborative Grant Initiative
    • Education Awards
    • Multi-Institutional Research Grant
    • ASE DEI Underrepresented in Medicine (URiM) Scholarship Application
    • Surgical Education and Leadership Fellowship (SELF)
    • Surgical Education Research Fellowship (SERF)
      • Surgical Education Research Fellowship Graduates
    • Visiting Scholar Fellowship
    • Ethics of Surgery Fellowship (EthoS)
  • Foundation
    • Donate Now!
    • Foundation Board
    • Honoring Our Surgical Education Mentors and Educators
    • The ASE Foundation: Building for the Future – Donors
    • Deb DaRosa Scholarship Application
    • Dr. Debra DaRosa Career Development Scholarship – Donors
    • CESERT Pyramid Grant Application
    • Spotlight on CESERT Pyramid Grant Awardees!
    • Newsletter
    • Annual Report
    • Review Committee
    • Grants Awarded
    • Corporate Partners
  • Resources
    • Policy for Conducting Survey Research of ASE Members
    • Nonphysician Professional Educator
    • Educational Materials
    • Collaborative Curricula
    • Getting Started in Surgical Education Research
    • Surgical Education Research Modules
    • Surgical Education Research Webinar Series
    • Podcasts
    • Teaching Modules
    • ASE CoSEF Peer Engagement for Education Research Success Webinar Series
  • ATLAS
  • Donate
  • Login

Annual Meeting 2018 Presentations

C1 - 07: SURGEON COLLABORATION IN THE LEARNING AND IMPLEMENTATION OF NEW PROCEDURES
Shay Seth, MD1, Wade Gofton, MD, MEd1, Carol-anne Moulton, MBBS, PhD2, Timothy Wood, PhD1; 1University of Ottawa, 2University of Toronto

 

Purpose: Physicians regularly make changes in their practice to ensure they are providing high quality patient care. In surgery, this includes learning and safely implementing new skills, techniques and technologies. The process of adopting a new procedure is associated with risks to patients, surgeons and the healthcare system. Surgeons are responsible for identifying and addressing these risks prior to implementation of the new skill. This study explored the surgeon experience of learning and integrating a new procedure into practice and the strategies used to mitigate the associated risks.

Methods: A modified constructivist, grounded theory approach was utilized. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eighteen purposively sampled surgeons and interpreted through constant comparative analysis. Emergent themes were identified and a conceptual framework was developed for understanding the surgeon experience associated with adopting and integrating a new procedure into practice.

Results: Despite representing various surgical specialties and hospitals, the participants described a similar approach to identifying and addressing the risks associated with the adoption of a new procedure. Collaborating with peers and mentors was cited as being a particularly important strategy for facilitating the implementation of a new skill. Surgeons characterized the direct support provided by a colleague or mentor during the learning process and in the operating room as an element that increased their comfort level. However, the process of arranging such collaborations was described as a hindrance to the process. Surgeons perceived policies related to licensure, insurance and hospital privileges as barriers to working with colleagues and mentors to safely implement new skills.

Conclusion: When going through the process of learning and implementing a new procedure, surgeons attempt to create an optimal learning and practice environment that maximizes patient safety. However, their efforts can be obstructed by the policies that govern the healthcare system. These policies, which are designed to ensure patient safety, have the unintended consequence of impeding surgeon learning, innovation and knowledge translation. This study highlights the need for surgeons and policy makers to work as partners in ensuring that surgeons receive the support that is needed for the safe implementation of new skills, techniques and technologies.

Footer

Contact the ASE

11300 W. Olympic Blvd
Suite 600
Los Angeles, CA 90064 USA
(310) 215-1226
[email protected]

Follow ASE

  • LinkedIn
  • X

Advanced Training in Laparoscopic Suturing

The Official Journal of the Association for Surgical Education

Follow GSE on X

  • X