4.2 Article

How Surgical Mentors Teach: A Classification of In Vivo Teaching Behaviors Part 1: Verbal Teaching Guidance

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION
Volume 72, Issue 2, Pages 243-250

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2014.10.003

Keywords

attending physicians; fellow physician; medical education; resident physician; surgical education; video recording

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OBJECTIVES: To illuminate surgical teaching at a fine level of detail by filming intraoperative communication between surgical attending physicians and trainees and provide a naturalistic categorization and analysis of verbal teaching behaviors. DESIGN: Live, intraoperative verbal exchanges between surgical attending physicians and their trainees (residents and fellows) were filmed, and key verbal teaching moments were transcribed. In follow-up interviews, attending physicians and trainees watched video clips of their teaching case and answered open-ended questions about their surgical teaching methods. Using a grounded theory approach, we examined the videos and interviews for what might be construed as a teaching behavior and refined verbal teaching categories through constant comparison. SETTING: We filmed 5 cases in the operating suite of a university teaching hospital that provides gynecologic surgical care. PARTICIPANTS: We included 5 attending gynecologic surgeons, 3 fellows, and 5 residents for this study. RESULTS: More than 6 hours of film, 3 hours of interviews, and more than 400 verbal teaching utterances from our participating attending surgeons were transcribed. We found that attending surgeons used unique types of verbal guidance to describe relevant anatomy, explain the rationale behind a specific surgical action, command the trainee to perform the next step, reference a specific aspect of the surgery, and provide an indirect verbal construct. Attending physicians prefixed speech with polite terms and used terse language, colorful verbal analogies, and sometimes humor. Our participants denied a significant Hawthorne effect. Interrater reliability was high using Cohen kappa with 0.77 for the verbal categories. CONCLUSIONS: Our categorization of live intraoperative verbal teaching can provide a measurable, replicable basis for studying how spoken guidance can lead to the best intraoperative learning. Because surgical teaching occurs on a microscopic level, film review is important when analyzing intraoperative teaching behaviors. (C) 2014 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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