Surgical endoscopy
-
Comparative Study
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The early experience of surgical attendings compared with that of residents trained by apprenticeship.
During our first year of laparoscopic surgery, all cases were performed by attending surgeons; resident involvement was confined to camera work and occasionally to acting as first assistant. These residents were PGY3 or -4. During our second year, these same residents, who had learned the craft in the traditional apprenticeship method, on promotion to senior resident functioned as the primary surgeon in laparoscopic cholecystectomy cases, but under very close guidance by the credentialed attending. ⋯ Complication rates were similar in the first and second years. Training residents to do laparoscopic cholecystectomy can be done in a traditional residency program provided the attendings are adequately trained. However, the residents need a higher level of skill at this time than was necessary for open cholecystectomy and have to be further advanced in their training in order to perform this operation laparoscopically.