The Art of Teaching, Training, and Putting the Scalpel in Residents ’ Hands

Surgical education is under tremendous pressure due to ever-increasing medical knowledge and demands on trainees ’ time. They must continually learn more in less time due to work hour limitations, regulations, and electronic medical record demands. Surgical training must become more efficient. There is an unprecedented array of education and training opportunities for resident preparation. The preparation fo r each case has to be maximal. Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative simulation and discussions improve the educational benefit of the trainee experience. For the teaching surgeon, putting a scalpel in residents’ hands requires patience, knowledge, judgment, and a leap of faith in the re sident.
Source: Facial Plastic Surgery Clinics of North America - Category: Cosmetic Surgery Authors: Source Type: research