TY - JOUR
T1 - A national survey of educational resources utilized by the Resident and Associate Society of the American College of Surgeons membership
AU - Glass, Nina E.
AU - Kulaylat, Afif N.
AU - Zheng, Feibi
AU - E. Glarner, Carly
AU - Economopoulos, Konstantinos P.
AU - Hamed, Osama H.
AU - Bittner, James G.
AU - Sakran, Joseph V.
AU - Winfield, Robert D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/1/1
Y1 - 2015/1/1
N2 - Background Contemporary surgical education includes online resources, mobile platform applications, and simulation training. The aim of this study was to characterize educational tools used by surgical residents.Methods An anonymous web-based survey was distributed to 9,913 members of the Resident and Associate Society of the American College of Surgeons.Results We received 773 completed surveys. To prepare for examinations and expand fund of knowledge, most respondents used printed textbooks, online textbooks, and Surgical Council on Resident Education modules, respectively. Respondents used online textbooks and journal articles most often to investigate timely patient care issues. In contrast, mobile platform applications and online videos/lectures were used least. Fewer than half of respondents used simulators, limited by clinical duties, absence of feedback/supervision, and lack of working supplies.Conclusions Traditional educational resources dominate trainee preferences, although utilization of the Surgical Council on Resident Education curriculum continues to grow. Simulators remain a required tool for laparoscopic training, and incorporation of structured feedback and improved supervision may improve utilization.
AB - Background Contemporary surgical education includes online resources, mobile platform applications, and simulation training. The aim of this study was to characterize educational tools used by surgical residents.Methods An anonymous web-based survey was distributed to 9,913 members of the Resident and Associate Society of the American College of Surgeons.Results We received 773 completed surveys. To prepare for examinations and expand fund of knowledge, most respondents used printed textbooks, online textbooks, and Surgical Council on Resident Education modules, respectively. Respondents used online textbooks and journal articles most often to investigate timely patient care issues. In contrast, mobile platform applications and online videos/lectures were used least. Fewer than half of respondents used simulators, limited by clinical duties, absence of feedback/supervision, and lack of working supplies.Conclusions Traditional educational resources dominate trainee preferences, although utilization of the Surgical Council on Resident Education curriculum continues to grow. Simulators remain a required tool for laparoscopic training, and incorporation of structured feedback and improved supervision may improve utilization.
KW - Barriers
KW - Graduate medical education
KW - SCORE
KW - Simulation
KW - Surgical education
KW - Surgical residency training
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U2 - 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2014.09.016
DO - 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2014.09.016
M3 - Article
C2 - 25454958
AN - SCOPUS:84915747260
SN - 0002-9610
VL - 209
SP - 59
EP - 64
JO - American Journal of Surgery
JF - American Journal of Surgery
IS - 1
ER -