Litcius/Paper detail

Is Initial Board Certification Associated With Better Early Career Surgical Outcomes?

Daniel E. Kendrick, Xilin Chen, Andrew Jones, Michael Clark, Zhaohui Fan, Hoda Bandeh-Ahmadi, Greg Wnuk, Jason P. Kopp, Beatriz Ibáñez Moreno, John W. Scott, Gurjit Sandhu, Jo Buyske, Justin B. Dimick, Brian C. George

2020Annals of Surgery27 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if initial American Board of Surgery certification in general surgery is associated with better risk-adjusted patient outcomes for Medicare patients undergoing partial colectomy by an early career surgeon. BACKGROUND: Board certification is a voluntary commitment to professionalism, continued learning, and delivery of high-quality patient care. Not all surgeons are certified, and some have questioned the value of certification due to limited evidence that board-certified surgeons have better patient outcomes. In response, we examined the outcomes of certified versus noncertified early career general surgeons. METHODS: We identified Medicare patients who underwent a partial colectomy between 2008 and 2016 and were operated on by a non-subspecialty trained surgeon within their first 5 years of practice. Surgeon certification status was determined using the American Board of Surgery data. Generalized linear mixed models were used to control for patient-, procedure-, and hospital-level effects. Primary outcomes were the occurrence of severe complications and occurrence of death within 30 days. RESULTS: We identified 69,325 patients who underwent a partial colectomy by an early career general surgeon. The adjusted rate of severe complications after partial colectomy by certified (n = 4239) versus noncertified (n = 191) early-career general surgeons was 9.1% versus 10.7% (odds ratio 0.83, P = 0.03). Adjusted mortality rate for certified versus noncertified early-career general surgeons was 4.9% versus 6.1% (odds ratio 0.79, P = 0.01). CONCLUSION: Patients undergoing partial colectomy by an early career general surgeon have decreased odds of severe complications and death when their surgeon is board certified.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCertificationBoard certificationColectomySubspecialtyOdds ratioMaintenance of CertificationOddsSurgeryGeneral surgeryQuality of life (healthcare)Family medicineInternal medicineNursingContinuing medical educationLogistic regressionUlcerative colitisDiseaseContinuing educationManagementMedical educationEconomicsSurgical Simulation and TrainingColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsInnovations in Medical Education
Is Initial Board Certification Associated With Better Early Career Surgical Outcomes? | Litcius