Der Chirurg; Zeitschrift für alle Gebiete der operativen Medizen
-
The original reason for using the German "Habilitation" degree to mean that a candidade had qualified and could conduct research and teach at a university is no longer really valid, as this is being threatened by its importance to further careers. Medical faculties must discuss how this development can be curtailed. In order to check the current situation, the Habilitation degree systems of 36 medical faculties of German universities were compared with the aid of a scoring system. ⋯ A significant decrease in the score values occurred with increasing age of the Habilitation degree (P = 0.002). Even if scoring systems are ambiguous and unfair, our analysis revealed serious differences in the quality of the Habilitation degree. Presuming that the German Habilitation degree should be maintained as a high-level qualification, we developed proposals that might be used to standardize this academic examination.
-
Open pelvic fractures are rare and account for 1-5% of all pelvic fractures. Mortality rates of 50% and even more have been reported. Bleeding and septic complications are the major causes of death. ⋯ Five patients died (12.5%); 28 survivors could be investigated with a mean follow-up of 10 years. It is concluded that the comparably low mortality rate is due to a standardized treatment protocol. The main principles of management are emergency stabilization of the unstable pelvis and early laparotomy.
-
Case Reports
[Radiotherapy in surgical and nonsurgical patients. Therapy expectations, quality of life and physician assessment].
The present study investigates patients' expectations toward radiotherapy and their associations to quality of life and physician judgements. Fifty-five patients with tumors of different sites (30 with previous tumor-related surgery, 25 without surgery) admitted to the department of radiotherapy filled out a standardized questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30, PLC by Siegrist et al., therapy-related expectations and success) before and after inpatient radiotherapy. The corresponding physician ratings were collected. ⋯ Surgical patients who had been operated on within the past year (n = 18) showed a particularly high healing expectancy (83%), whereas patients whose operation dated back more than 1 year focused on pain relief as therapeutic goal (83%). The surgeon, as the primary contact person for patients, can influence patients' therapy-related expectations. In explaining the overall therapeutic strategy, surgeons should also mention the scope and limits of adjuvant therapies.
-
Comment Letter Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Postoperative analgesia after endoscopic abdominal operations. Comment on the contribution by P. Steffen et al].