Military medicine
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Lack of obstetric and gynecologic (OBGYN) procedure exposure during general surgery residency was recognized as a training gap for military general surgery residents by U.S. Navy trauma and general surgeons serving as simulation leads for the Naval Medical Center Portsmouth general surgery resident program. Program faculty requested the authors develop and implement a recurring simulation curriculum to address this training gap. The primary goal of the simulation curriculum was to increase exposure to and confidence in performing four commonly encountered OBGYN procedures in a deployed setting: spontaneous vaginal delivery (SVD), Bartholin's cyst incision and drainage with Word catheter placement, cesarean delivery, and total abdominal hysterectomy (TAH). We hypothesized that trainees exposed to the new simulation curriculum would demonstrate an increase in knowledge and confidence in these four commonly encountered OBGYN procedures. ⋯ The implemented curriculum increased general surgery trainees' knowledge and confidence in four commonly encountered OBGYN procedures and demonstrated a high level of learner satisfaction and sustainability. The curriculum exhibits high educational impact and could be a valuable adjunctive training for other non-OBGYN physicians who may need to provide OBGYN care in military environments.
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Within the Military Health System, the process of transporting patients from an initial point of injury and throughout the entire continuum of care is called "en route care." A Committee on En Route Combat Casualty Care was established in 2016 as part of the DoD Joint Trauma System to create practice guidelines, recommend training standards, and identify research priorities within the military en route care system. ⋯ To ensure an evidence-based approach to future military conflicts and other medical challenges, focused research and technological development to address these 10 en route care research gaps are urgently needed.