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General Surgery Residents' Retention of Knowledge After an Anorectal Skills Workshop. | LitMetric

General Surgery Residents' Retention of Knowledge After an Anorectal Skills Workshop.

J Surg Res

Department of Surgery, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, University Hospitals Research in Surgical Outcomes & Effectiveness Center (UH-RISES), Cleveland, Ohio. Electronic address:

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study aimed to improve surgical residents' understanding of anorectal issues by developing a hands-on workshop.
  • Thirty-six residents participated in the workshop, which included both lectures and practical skills stations, and they were assessed on their knowledge and confidence before, after, and six months later.
  • Results showed that both knowledge and confidence scores significantly improved and were retained over six months, indicating the effectiveness of the workshop in enhancing residents' management of anorectal complaints.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Studies have demonstrated suboptimal resident exposure to anorectal pathology. A workshop was developed at an academic general surgery residency. This study assesses durability of learning from the workshop.

Methods: Thirty-six residents participated in a skills laboratory addressing diagnosis and management of anorectal complaints. The skills laboratory was broken into didactic and hand-on skills stations. Residents completed pre-, post- and 6-mo after workshop assessments to evaluate knowledge and confidence. Knowledge and confidence-based scores pre-, post- and 6-mo after workshop were compared.

Results: Scores demonstrated retention of information. Knowledge-based question median scores improved from 63.2% pre-workshop to 73.7% post-workshop and 76.3% at 6 mo (P = 0.0005). Median confidence scores improved from 31 pre-workshop to 40 post-workshop, and were stable at 6 mo (P = 0.0001).

Conclusions: Knowledge and confidence gained from an anorectal skills workshop was stable or improved at 6 mo. These results suggest that an anorectal curriculum is effective at improving general surgery resident background knowledge and confidence when managing anorectal complaints.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2021.12.018DOI Listing

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