American College of Surgeons
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[ST-16] Statement on Surgical Residencies and the Educational Environment

[by the American College of Surgeons]


Residency programs in surgical specialties have always been challenging--both physically and intellectually. Hard work, long hours, high levels of stress, and a strong emphasis on personal responsibility and accountability have long characterized the training of a surgeon. Even so, most surgeons remember their residencies with great fondness, believing these years to be among the most rewarding of their professional careers.

However, the working conditions for surgical residents have been changing. The information explosion in medicine, the increase in bureaucracy that characterizes medical practice today, and the trend toward ambulatory care and a much abbreviated hospital stay for most patients, accompanied by an emphasis on inpatient care only for critically ill patients, have substantially increased both the work load and the stress of being a surgical resident. Some medical specialties have chosen to focus on reducing the hours worked by residents as a solution to these pressures. With their long tradition of providing continuity of care for their patients, however, surgeons have come to a different conclusion. We have chosen to focus on the quality of the educational program and the work required, and we have come to support changes in the working environment as important factors in making the surgical residency a better environment for learning and for providing patient care.

The following statement, SURGICAL RESIDENCIES AND THE EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENT, is a product of many months of deliberations by members of the College's Graduate Medical Education Committee. It expands upon the content of the College's Statement on Fundamental Characteristics of Surgical Residency Programs, which was published in August 1988 and which described continuity of care as a fundamental characteristic of surgical residency programs. We encourage the reading and use of the recommendations put forward in this document by all program directors, faculty members, and leaders of teaching hospital administrations. Our surgical residents are the future of our profession, and it is our obligation to ensure that our system of surgical education continues to produce the best surgeons in the world.

The American College of Surgeons has long been concerned with the education of surgeons of the future--our surgical residents. Following the establishment in 1937 of minimum standards for surgical residencies and field surveys of programs, the first of the Residency Review Committees, the RRC for Surgery, was established in 1950 as a tripartite collaboration of the College, the American Medical Association, and the American Board of Surgery. Similar tripartite RRCs were subsequently established for colon and rectal surgery, neurological surgery, otolaryngology, plastic surgery, thoracic surgery, and urology. These committees have set high standards of quality for graduate surgical education that are used in evaluation and accreditation of surgical residency programs in the United States. As a consequence, continuous improvement in the educational process in surgical residencies has been achieved.

A major focus in the educational programs is, of course, the curriculum. Driven in part by requirements of the certifying boards, the didactic and practical curricula for surgical programs have undergone constant evolution as the practice of surgery has advanced. The environment in which this intense curriculum is carried out must facilitate learning so that the educational experience will be maximized. Many observers, largely outside of the surgical discipline, have been highly critical of one characteristic feature of the environment in surgical residencies--namely, the duty hours. In 1989, an initiative was undertaken in the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, the umbrella organization for all RRCs in medicine, to place strict limits on the hours per week that residents would be permitted to work. Many nonsurgical residencies developed systems, such as night float rotations, so that shifts of residents could be developed to reduce the hours worked. During the long and vigorous debate that followed, surgeons have become aware that the emphasis on hours worked diverted attention from more pressing problems in residency education, namely the conditions under which residents are asked to work--that is, the working environment and the nature of the educational program.

Little attention has been given to the working environment despite an uneasy truce that was achieved in 1992, which resulted in the addition of broad language relative to duty hours and call schedules in the Essentials of Accredited Residencies¹ General Requirements and the additions of specific language on hours worked in the Special Requirements for each specialty. The position of many surgical educators is that resident fatigue related to excessive work load is accentuated by burgeoning paperwork, pressures to reduce length of hospital stay, the need to cope with the increasing complexity of care, and required involvement in patient care activities that should be the responsibility of support staff. Addressing these issues would go far in achieving the goal of assuring each patient that the resident assigned will be a "healthy, alert, responsible, and responsive physician."1

As pointed out by Spencer in his response to the hours debate, "The primary purpose of a residency program is education of the resident, not service to the hospital."2 Spencer has also stated the obvious: "Preserving the crucially important ability of the physician to provide continuity of care to his or her patient--without producing severe physical exhaustion in the physician--is clearly one of our most important objectives."3

The American Board of Surgery (ABS) addressed the resident working environment in a position paper that was developed in 1992.

"The ABS acknowledges that presently the Resident Working Environment is not optimal in some general surgery residencies. Adverse factors impacting on the working environment include: (1) Undue amount of time spent on tasks that could be better accomplished by other members of the health care team; (2) Excessive, inappropriate, and uncoordinated use of the paging system; (3) Inattention to personal physical needs, such as nutrition, adequate sleeping quarters, safety, and so on; and (4) Insufficient attention to psychological and emotional stresses, such as lack of time for family, indebtedness, recreation, and lack of adequate support systems and groups. The residents' problems have been exacerbated by sicker inpatients, a markedly expanded base of knowledge, and multiple sites of care delivery."2

The ABS recommended that the RRC for Surgery make the status of the working environment an important consideration in accreditation of programs, and the RRC has subsequently taken steps to implement this recommendation.

The Graduate Medical Education Committee has also considered the resident work environment, and it has developed the following recommendations and proposals.

Recommendations:

"The surgical profession remains dedicated to the education and training of highly qualified young surgeons. Residency programs must be structured in such a fashion, and with enough flexibility, that the individuals who complete the residency will be the best...that our system can produce."4 Those of us who are responsible for overseeing surgical residency programs must strive to meet that goal in order to meet our obligation to our profession, to our patients, and to the public.

References
1. Directory of Graduate Medical Education Programs, 1992-1993. Chicago: American Medical Association, 1992.
2. Improving Efficiency While Maintaining Emphasis on Continuity of Care. Proceedings of a Conference on Surgical Resident Education. Chicago: American College of Surgeons, 1989. Comments of Frank C. Spencer, MD, FACS, p. 9.
3. Position paper on Resident Working Environment. Philadelphia: American Board of Surgery, 1992.
4. Improving Efficiency While Maintaining Emphasis on Continuity of Care. Proceedings of a Conference on Surgical Resident Education. Chicago: American College of Surgeons, 1989. Comments of Paul A. Ebert, MD, FACS, p. 3.

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Reprinted from Bulletin of the American College of Surgeons
Vol. 79, No. 1, Pages 89-93, January 1994

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