The cost of surgical training: analysis of operative time for laparoscopic cholecystectomy

BackgroundDuration of surgery is a main cost factor of surgical training. The purpose of this analysis of operative times for laparoscopic cholecystectomies (LC) was to quantify the extra time and related costs in regards to the surgeons’ experience in the operating room (OR).MethodsAll LC performed between January 01, 2005 and December 31, 2008 in 46 hospitals reporting to the database of the Swiss Association for Quality Management in Surgery (AQC) were analyzed (n = 10,010). Four levels of seniority were specified: resident (R), junior consultant (JC), senior consultant (SC), and attending surgeon (AS). The differences in operative time according to seniority were investigated in a multivariable log-linear and median regression analysis controlling for possible confounders. The OR costs were calculated by using a full cost rate in a teaching hospital.ResultsA total of 9,208 LC were available for analysis; 802 had to be excluded due to missing data (n = 212) or secondary major operations (n = 590). Twenty-eight percent of the LC were performed by R as teaching operations (n = 2,591). Compared with R, the multivariable analysis of operative time showed a median difference of −2.5 min (−9.0; 4.8) for JC and −18 min (−25; −11) for SC and −28 min (−35; −10) for AS, respectively. The OR minute costs were €17.57, resulting in incremental costs of €492 (159; 615) per operation in case of tutorial assistance.ConclusionsThe proportion of LC performed as tutorial assistance for R remains low. Surgical training in the OR causes relevant case-related extra time and therefore costs.

[1]  I. Shaikh,et al.  Are we performing enough emergency laparoscopic cholecystectomies? An experience from a district general hospital. , 2009, International journal of surgery.

[2]  E. W. Steyerberg Dealing with missing values , 2009 .

[3]  J. Weigelt,et al.  Putting a price on education: hours and dollars for a general surgery curriculum. , 2010, American journal of surgery.

[4]  M. Schäfer,et al.  Critical appraisal of single port access cholecystectomy , 2010, The British journal of surgery.

[5]  R. Chung How much time do surgical residents need to learn operative surgery? , 2005, American journal of surgery.

[6]  R. Knapp Financing graduate medical education and limiting resident work hours: a political assessment(1). , 2002, American journal of surgery.

[7]  D. Mark,et al.  Clinical prediction models: are we building better mousetraps? , 2003, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[8]  T. Babineau,et al.  The "cost" of operative training for surgical residents. , 2004, Archives of surgery.

[9]  A. Khan,et al.  Elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy for surgical trainees: predictive factors of operative time. , 2009, The surgeon : journal of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons of Edinburgh and Ireland.

[10]  Katherine C. Kellogg,et al.  The Impact of the 80-Hour Resident Workweek on Surgical Residents and Attending Surgeons , 2006, Annals of surgery.

[11]  G. Dunnington,et al.  Resident versus no resident: a single institutional study on operative complications, mortality, and cost. , 2008, Surgery.

[12]  D. Kauvar,et al.  Influence of resident and attending surgeon seniority on operative performance in laparoscopic cholecystectomy. , 2006, The Journal of surgical research.

[13]  S. Armen,et al.  The 80-hour work week: will we have less-experienced graduating surgeons? , 2004, Current surgery.

[14]  U. Guller,et al.  Effect of the 50-hour workweek limitation on training of surgical residents in Switzerland. , 2010, Archives of surgery.

[15]  R. Šefr,et al.  Our experience with early integration of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in surgical residency training , 1995, Surgical Endoscopy.

[16]  K. Z'graggen,et al.  Complications of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in Switzerland , 1998, Surgical Endoscopy.

[17]  Ulrike Grünert,et al.  Advances in understanding circuits serving colour vision , 2010 .

[18]  K. Z'graggen,et al.  Complications of laparoscopic cholecystectomy in Switzerland. A prospective 3-year study of 10,174 patients. Swiss Association of Laparoscopic and Thoracoscopic Surgery. , 1998, Surgical endoscopy.

[19]  S. Frank Financing graduate medical education , 2009, Nature Clinical Practice Neurology.

[20]  M. Siegrist,et al.  Residents’ reasons for specialty choice: influence of gender, time, patient and career , 2010, Medical education.

[21]  J. S. O'shea Individual and social concerns in American surgical education: paying patients, prepaid health insurance, Medicare and Medicaid. , 2010, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[22]  Keith W. Millikan,et al.  The impact of laparoscopic cholecystectomy on the operative experience of surgical residents , 2004, Surgical Endoscopy.

[23]  C. Hwang,et al.  The cost of resident education. , 2010, The Journal of surgical research.

[24]  T. Koperna How long do we need teaching in the operating room? The true costs of achieving surgical routine , 2004, Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery.

[25]  R. Haluck,et al.  Postgraduate year does not influence operating time in laparoscopic cholecystectomy. , 2001, The Journal of surgical research.

[26]  B. Ryder,et al.  A time-cost analysis of teaching a laparoscopic entero-enterostomy. , 2007, Journal of surgical education.

[27]  M. Bridges,et al.  The financial impact of teaching surgical residents in the operating room. , 1999, American journal of surgery.