Aim Of The Study: Pediatric surgery trainees at our institution perform 15 to 20 supervised laparoscopic pyloromyotomies during their junior year, and are allowed to perform the operation independently without supervision during their senior year. We reviewed the outcomes of laparoscopic pyloromyotomies performed by senior trainees operating without supervision and compared them to experienced pediatric surgeons.
Method: We did a retrospective reviewed of all unsupervised laparoscopic pyloromyotomies (n = 90) performed by the last 12 pediatric surgery fellows (2012-2018) during their senior year, and the most recent 90 consecutive laparoscopic pyloromyotomies performed by 9 experienced pediatric surgeons.
Aim Of The Study: Pediatric surgery trainees at our program are allowed to perform unsupervised laparoscopic appendectomies during their last year of training to promote independent operative decision-making skills. We reviewed the outcomes of laparoscopic appendectomies done by senior trainees without supervision and compared them to experienced pediatric surgeons.
Methods: We reviewed 500 laparoscopic appendectomies performed without supervision by the last 10 pediatric surgery trainees during their last year of training (first 50 cases of each trainee).
Purpose: To examine surgical outcomes of children with pancreaticoduodenal injuries at a Quaternary Level I pediatric trauma center.
Methods: We queried a prospectively maintained trauma database of a level one pediatric trauma center for all cases of pancreatic and/or duodenal injury from 2002 to 2017. Analysis was conducted using JMP 13.