• World journal of surgery · Jul 2020

    Surgical Training Throughout Africa: A Review of Operative Case Volumes at Multiple Training Centers.

    • Robert K Parker, Hillary M Topazian, Wairimu Ndegwa, Patricia Chesang, Shinji Strain, Keir Thelander, Andrea S Parker, and Robert Riviello.
    • Department of Surgery, Tenwek Hospital, PO Box 39, Bomet, 20400, Kenya. robert_k_parker@brown.edu.
    • World J Surg. 2020 Jul 1; 44 (7): 2100-2107.

    BackgroundAdequate surgical training is paramount to produce competent surgeons to address the global burden of surgical disease. The Pan-African Academy of Christian Surgeons (PAACS) has general surgery training programs in eight countries. Operative case volumes have been positively associated with improved trainee performance and patient outcomes. For certification in the USA, 850 total operations are required from defined case categories. Yet, little is known about the operative experience of surgical trainees throughout Africa.MethodsOperative procedures were reviewed, categorized, and validated from a cohort of PAACS graduates and compared to graduates from Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) programs. The primary and secondary outcomes were total case volumes and cases within ACGME-defined categories. Regional variations were explored.ResultsTwenty PAACS trainees, from five programs in four countries, performed 38,267 unique procedures. ACGME reports on 1211 residents from 251 programs. PAACS graduates logged more major cases (median 1448) than ACGME graduates (median 993) (p value = 0·0001). PAACS graduates performed more gynecology and obstetrics, orthopedics, head and neck, urology, endocrine, operative trauma, pediatric surgery, plastic surgery, and skin and soft tissue cases. US graduates performed more cases in abdomen, alimentary tract, breast, thoracic, and vascular categories. Comparison between regions demonstrated volume and category variations between Kenya and Gabon, Ethiopia, and Cameroon.ConclusionPAACS trainees perform more operations than ACGME trainees with differences in distribution. This experience can serve as a model for regional educational programs seeking to address the broad and largely unmet burden of surgical disease.

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