Background: Surgical technological advances in the past three decades have led to dramatic reductions in the morbidity associated with abdominal procedures and permanently altered the surgical practice landscape. Significant changes continue apace including surgical robotics, natural orifice-based surgery, and single-incision approaches. These disruptive technologies have on occasion been injurious to patients, and high-stakes assessment before adoption of new technologies would be reasonable. Methods: We reviewed the drivers for well-established psychometric techniques available for the standards-setting process. Results: We present a series of examples that are relevant in the surgical domain including standards setting for knowledge and ...
The first residency programs for surgical training were introduced in Germany in the late 1880s and ...
While surgery is gaining in efficiency it is equally getting more and more complex. Meanwhile patien...
Objective: The present study asks whether intraoperative principles are shared among faculty in a si...
Background: Surgical technological advances in the past three decades have led to dramatic reduction...
Surgical technological advances in the past three decades have led to dramatic reductions in the mor...
A paradigm shift in surgical training from an apprenticeship to a competency based model requires va...
OBJECTIVE: To define criteria for robotic credentialing using expert consensus. BACKGROUND: A recent...
Objective: To define criteria for robotic credentialing using expert consensus. Background: A...
BACKGROUND: Robotic surgery has seen unprecedented growth, requiring hospitals to establish or updat...
Recent high-profile cases have heightened the need for a formal structure to monitor achievement and...
Introduction: Outcome-based assessments form a central component of the new wave of educational refo...
The concept of assessing competency in surgical practice is not new and has taken on an added urgenc...
Introduction: The training of surgical residents has seen a tremendous shift in education and assess...
OBJECTIVE: To develop guidelines for a faculty training program in nontechnical skill assessment in ...
Background: Learning of surgical procedures is traditionally based on a master-apprentice model. Seg...
The first residency programs for surgical training were introduced in Germany in the late 1880s and ...
While surgery is gaining in efficiency it is equally getting more and more complex. Meanwhile patien...
Objective: The present study asks whether intraoperative principles are shared among faculty in a si...
Background: Surgical technological advances in the past three decades have led to dramatic reduction...
Surgical technological advances in the past three decades have led to dramatic reductions in the mor...
A paradigm shift in surgical training from an apprenticeship to a competency based model requires va...
OBJECTIVE: To define criteria for robotic credentialing using expert consensus. BACKGROUND: A recent...
Objective: To define criteria for robotic credentialing using expert consensus. Background: A...
BACKGROUND: Robotic surgery has seen unprecedented growth, requiring hospitals to establish or updat...
Recent high-profile cases have heightened the need for a formal structure to monitor achievement and...
Introduction: Outcome-based assessments form a central component of the new wave of educational refo...
The concept of assessing competency in surgical practice is not new and has taken on an added urgenc...
Introduction: The training of surgical residents has seen a tremendous shift in education and assess...
OBJECTIVE: To develop guidelines for a faculty training program in nontechnical skill assessment in ...
Background: Learning of surgical procedures is traditionally based on a master-apprentice model. Seg...
The first residency programs for surgical training were introduced in Germany in the late 1880s and ...
While surgery is gaining in efficiency it is equally getting more and more complex. Meanwhile patien...
Objective: The present study asks whether intraoperative principles are shared among faculty in a si...