Establishing a Rural General Surgery Residency Program: Identifying Community Stakeholder Perception and Obstacles of a de Novo Residency in Rural Appalachia

被引:0
|
作者
Suliman, Toufeeq [1 ]
Curry, Clayton [2 ]
Dolan, Nicholas [2 ]
Raines, Jo Ann [3 ]
Denning, David [1 ]
Cisco-Goff, Jodi [1 ]
Amiri, Farzad [1 ]
机构
[1] Marshall Univ, Joan C Edwards Sch Med, Dept Surg, 1600 Med Ctr Dr, Huntington, WV 25701 USA
[2] Marshall Univ, Joan C Edwards Sch Med, Huntington, WV USA
[3] Marshall Univ, Joan C Edwards Sch Med, Off Grad Med Educ, Huntington, WV USA
关键词
general surgery; rural; accreditation council for graduate medical education rural track program; community impact; Appalachia; residency;
D O I
10.1177/00031348221146943
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Rural healthcare has become more challenging over the past several years with increasingly limited access to surgical care in the rural setting. The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has recently introduced the Rural Track Program (RTP) initiative to combat physician shortage in rural areas. We intend to start the first Rural General Surgery Residency program under the RTP designation in rural Appalachia. Study Design 430 community stakeholders were surveyed regarding the anticipated impact of a new training program. Questions focused on the understanding of a Residency Program, the care provided by residents, impact on availability of local care, current geographical limitation of surgical care, and potential benefits/obstacles of the training program. Results Over 90% of all surveyed approved of training surgeons locally, with the local government believing that the program would be a good investment for the community. Several locals had been treated by resident physicians at other facilities and the majority were satisfied with the care they received. Several families frequently travel to larger cities for surgical care, with 96% of all respondents believing that the program would provide better access to care locally. Conclusion Our study demonstrated that the community is familiar with healthcare in a training facility and welcoming to a local training program, while believing that trainees will have a positive impact on local surgical care in rural Appalachia. We will continue to work with the local community and healthcare personnel while developing the program and tailor our Residency to the rural setting as able.
引用
收藏
页码:6030 / 6034
页数:5
相关论文
共 8 条
  • [1] An Examination of General Surgery Residency Programs with a Rural Track
    Halline, Christopher G.
    Mokhashi, Nikita
    De Bie, Felix R.
    Greenwood-Ericksen, Margaret B.
    Zonfrillo, Mark R.
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2022, 79 (02) : 315 - 321
  • [2] Attrition in general surgery residency: can global and rural surgery shift the paradigm?
    Moris, Demetrios
    Karachaliou, Georgia-Sofia
    Pawlik, Timothy M.
    Nwomeh, Benedict
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 2018, 224 : 166 - 168
  • [3] Evaluation of Gender Bias Through Autonomy During Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy at a Rural Community General Surgery Residency Program
    Biller, Jessica
    Simunich, Thomas
    Morrissey, Shawna
    Dumire, Russell
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2023, 80 (11) : 1508 - 1515
  • [4] The importance of robotic-assisted procedures in residency training to applicants of a community general surgery residency program
    William Krause
    Julio Bird
    Journal of Robotic Surgery, 2019, 13 : 379 - 382
  • [5] The importance of robotic-assisted procedures in residency training to applicants of a community general surgery residency program (vol 13, pg 379, 2019)
    Krause, William
    Bird, Julio
    Cullinane, Daniel C.
    JOURNAL OF ROBOTIC SURGERY, 2019, 13 (03) : 383 - 383
  • [6] Training robotic community surgeons: our experience implementing a robotics curriculum at a rural community general surgery training program
    Krause, William
    Bird, Julio
    JOURNAL OF ROBOTIC SURGERY, 2019, 13 (03) : 385 - 389
  • [7] Training robotic community surgeons: our experience implementing a robotics curriculum at a rural community general surgery training program
    William Krause
    Julio Bird
    Journal of Robotic Surgery, 2019, 13 : 385 - 389
  • [8] Not just a figurehead: improved resident perception of training following the addition of Administrative Chief Residents in a general surgery residency program
    Steven A. Wisel
    Clara I. Gomez-Sanchez
    Lily S. Cheng
    Anamaria J. Robles
    Patricia S. O’Sullivan
    Linda M. Reilly
    Kenzo Hirose
    Global Surgical Education - Journal of the Association for Surgical Education, 1 (1):