Access and feasibility of orthopaedic training in the independent sector - A Deanery's experience

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Access and feasibility of orthopaedic training in the independent sector - A Deanery's experience
المؤلفون: Sunny Parikh, Martha Ricketts, William Nabulyato, Humza T. Osmani, Victoria Stohlner, Moritz Lebe, Luke Granger, Hussein Taki, Sunil Haradi Kumar, Benjamin Davies, Pradyumna Raval, Charles Howell, George Joseph Michael Hourston, Pamela Garcia Pulido, Anish Sanghrajka, William Matthews, Albert Ngu, Aroon Baskaradas, Aaron Rooney, Timothy James Karssiens, Zain Sohail, Christine Scarsbrook, James R. Gill, Nishil Modi, Jennifer Barwell, Jaison Patel, Jeeshan Rahman, Simon Hislop, Joshua Ong, Rosamund Tansey, Sumon Salman Huq, Ahmad Al-Sukaini, Jonathan Lenihan, Hammad Sadique, Mohammed Almustafa, Ignatius Liew, Kriti Singhania, Karl Logan, Mike Dunne, Mira Pecheva, Vishal Kumar, Samuel Hopwood, Nadim Tarazi, Ken Wong, Sertaz-Niel Kang, Ady Abdelhaq, Thomas Stringfellow, Catherine Hatzantonis, Rachael Fisher, Silvester Kabwama, Ashok Ramasamy, Joe Dixon, Hassan Fawi, Alexandra Macmillan, Alastair Vince, Anand Shah, Jehan Butt, Panagiotis Sgardelis, Omar Toma
المصدر: The surgeon : journal of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland. 20(5)
سنة النشر: 2021
مصطلحات موضوعية: Medical education, 2019-20 coronavirus outbreak, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), business.industry, COVID-19, Training (civil), Orthopedics, Work (electrical), Education, Medical, Graduate, Scale (social sciences), Health care, Medicine, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Surgery, Training needs, Trauma orthopaedics, Clinical Competence, business
الوصف: Introduction Coronavirus (COVID-19) has negatively impacted healthcare around the world. It has had a major impact on orthopaedic training. The independent sector has been proposed as a facility for future training. Our aim was to provide an overview of the current higher surgical trainees’ experience in the independent sector. Method Training orthopaedic registrars within the East of England deanery were asked to complete an electronic questionnaire of their training experience in the independent sector between 5th November to 2nd December 2020. Results 57 of 64 registrars (89%) from across all thirteen regional training hospitals responded. 44% attended the independent sector, but 7 only assisted (28%). No third year trainees went, but there was an even spread of other training years attending a mean of four sessions. Sixty-six indicative procedures were performed, all with supervisors scrubbed. Second year trainees performed the most cases with 4 on average. Completion of work based assessments was low. 20% trainees reported a negative experience. 80% enjoyed themselves. 52% felt they achieved their goals. 29% trainees felt that independent sector operating would compensate for the shortfall in training brought about by COVID-19. The main obstacles to independent sector training were lack of access and opportunity (51%) and poor induction and paperwork issues (22%) Conclusion This is the first deanery-wide assessment of access to and training within the independent sector due to COVID-19. Independent sector operating for orthopaedic trainees is feasible on scale and should be embedded to supplement training in the future. In their current state independent sector facilities are not easily and universally accessible to fulfil training needs.
تدمد: 1479-666X
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::da10425e164fcf78ed777d4c903ccde9Test
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34419343Test
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....da10425e164fcf78ed777d4c903ccde9
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE