• 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

C3 - 07: ENTRUSTING INTERNS WITH THE PATIENT HANDOVER: HOW HELPFUL IS SIMULATED PERFORMANCE EVALUATION?
Ayalivis De La Rosa1, Shabnam Hafiz, MD2, Shawna Kettyle, MD2, Anagha Kumar3, Shimae Fitzgibbons, MD, MEd4; 1Georgetown University Medical Center, 2MedStar Washington Hospital Center, 3MedStar Health Research Institute, 4MedStar Georgetown University Hospital

 

Purpose: One consequence of resident duty hour restrictions has been increased attention to the patient handover, underscored by one of the American Association of Medical Colleges’ (AAMC) Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs): the ability to “give or receive a patient handover to transition care responsibility.” While simulation based training and standardized handover tools have been widely developed, few studies have explored the predictability of performance in a simulated handover to subsequent ‘real world’ performance. This study looks at the ability of intern performance in a simulated handover exercise to predict subsequent real-world clinical handover performance. 

Methods: IRB approval was obtained and interns from five surgical specialties across two hospitals participating in an intern pre-clinical orientation were approached for enrollment. Participants proceeded through a simulated “rounding and handover” exercise: receiving a model handover from a senior resident or faculty, rounding on a standardized patient and presenting their findings to their proctor, and then performing a patient handover to a second intern (who then proceeded through the same exercise). Each intern completed two rounds of the exercise, with each round ending in a 10-15 minute EPA-based checklist feedback session. Over the subsequent three weeks, interns were evaluated by a single trained observer using the same checklist to score their clinical patient handovers. The predictive ability of the simulated handover performance score was analyzed using univariate linear regression.

Results: 34 out of a total of 35 interns were enrolled and completed the handover simulation (one intern did not have documented checklist completion). 17 of the 34 interns were subsequently observed during a clinical patient handover. The mean score for performance during the simulation was 6.0 (SD 1.47) vs. 5.82 (SD 1.24) in the live hospital setting. The performance score in the simulated setting was predictive of the interns’ performance score during a hospital clinical handover (p = 0.002).

Conclusion: A simulation based assessment of surgical interns’ ability to perform a consistent and adequate patient handover was predictive of their subsequent observed in-hospital performance, and may be considered for evaluation of the entrustability of interns with respect to this EPA.

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