Case Volume and Readiness to Deploy: Clinical Opportunities for Active-Duty Surgeons Outside of Military Hospitals.
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BACKGROUND
The Military Health System (MHS) utilizes a readiness program that identifies the knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) necessary for surgeons to provide combat casualty care. Operative productivity is assigned an objective score based upon case type and complexity and totaled to assess overall readiness. As of 2019, only 10.1% of surgeons met goal readiness threshold. At one tertiary Military Treatment Facility (MTF), leadership has taken an aggressive approach towards increasing readiness by forming Military Training Agreements (MTAs) and allowing Off Duty Employment (ODE). We sought to quantify the efficacy of this approach.
STUDY DESIGN
Operative logs from 2021 were obtained from surgeons assigned to the MTF. Cases were assigned CPT codes and processed through the KSA calculator (Deloitte; London, UK). Each surgeon was then surveyed to identify time away from clinical duties for deployment or military training.
RESULTS
Nine surgeons were present in 2021 and spent an average of 10.1 weeks (19.5%) abroad. Surgeons performed 2348 cases (Avg 261 ± 95) including 1575 (Avg 175; 67.1%) at the MTF, 606 (Avg 67.3; 25.8%) at MTAs, and 167 (Avg 18.6, 7.1%) during ODE. Adding MTA and ODE caseloads increased KSA scores by 56% (17,765 ± 7,889 v 11,391 ± 8,355). Using the MHS threshold of 14,000, three of nine (33.3%) surgeons met the readiness threshold from MTF productivity alone. Including all cases, seven of nine (77.8%) surgeons met threshold.
CONCLUSIONS
Increased utilization of MTAs and ODE significantly augment average caseloads. These cases provide considerable benefit and result in surgeon readiness far exceeding the MHS average. Military leadership can maximize the chances of meeting readiness goals by encouraging clinical opportunities outside the MTF.