"Staff surgeons should supervise as needed and minimize unnecessary [emergency department] time. And residents, for their part, should be well prepared for emergency procedures through simulation training and aim to maximize their operating room efficiency," he suggested.
The results sparked a flurry of rebuttals led off by discussant Dr. Julie Ann Sosa, chief of endocrine surgery and director of health sciences research at Duke University, Durham, N.C., who said they conflict with other analyses showing little to no impact from residents in elective cases.
"If not interpreted with care, policy makers, payers, and the public could construe that surgical care at academic health centers is compromised by trainees, which could have unfortunate ramifications for everyone in the room as well as the trainees and the patients," she said.
Dr. Sosa expressed concern about drawing causal inferences from an observational study in the setting of possible selection bias and said attempts to match for case complexity using CPT codes do not necessarily account for say, "the difference between a routine appendectomy that takes 15 to 30 minutes and a complex one that takes 3 hours for a perforation."
Some attendees questioned why the authors didn’t match the institutions in the analysis and chose to ascribe all of the outcomes to residents, with a round of applause following the suggestion that the paper should be entitled Academic centers increase emergency surgery complications. Other attendees questioned whether the poor outcomes are a reflection of resident training and supervision.
Finally, Dr. George Velmahos, chief of trauma, emergency surgery, and surgical critical care, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, questioned whether, based on these findings, hospitals have a responsibility from a medical/legal standpoint to inform emergency surgery patients that a resident is in the operating room and may impact outcomes.
Dr. Kasotakis responded that institutions may want to add a clause to consent paperwork stating that residents and trainees will be participating in the case.
The complete manuscript of this study and its presentation at the American Surgical Association’s 134th Annual Meeting, April 2014, in Boston, is anticipated to be published in the Annals of Surgery, pending editorial review.
Dr. Kasotakis and his coauthors reported no conflicting interests.