Toward a new paradigm of care: a surgical leaders’ Delphi consensus on the organizational factors of the new pancreas units (E-AHPBA PUECOF study)
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Published:2024-04-25
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ISSN:2038-131X
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Container-title:Updates in Surgery
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Updates Surg
Author:
Cobianchi LorenzoORCID, Dal Mas Francesca, Abu Hilal Mohammad, Adham Mustapha, Alfieri Sergio, Balzano Gianpaolo, Barauskas Giedrius, Bassi Claudio, Besselink Marc G., Bockhorn Maximilian, Boggi Ugo, Conlon Kevin C., Coppola Roberto, Dervenis Christos, Dokmak Safi, Falconi Massimo, Fusai Giuseppe Kito, Gumbs Andrew A., Ivanecz Arpad, Memeo Riccardo, Radenković Dejan, Ramia Jose M., Rangelova Elena, Salvia Roberto, Sauvanet Alain, Serrablo Alejandro, Siriwardena Ajith K., Stättner Stefan, Strobel Oliver, Zerbi Alessandro, Malleo Giuseppe, Butturini Giovanni, Frigerio Isabella
Abstract
AbstractPancreas units represent new organizational models of care that are now at the center of the European debate. The PUECOF study, endorsed by the European–African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (E-AHPBA), aims to reach an expert consensus by enquiring surgical leaders about the Pancreas Units’ most relevant organizational factors, with 30 surgical leaders from 14 countries participating in the Delphi survey. Results underline that surgeons believe in the need to organize multidisciplinary meetings, nurture team leadership, and create metrics. Clinical professionals and patients are considered the most relevant stakeholders, while the debate is open when considering different subjects like industry leaders and patient associations. Non-technical skills such as ethics, teamwork, professionalism, and leadership are highly considered, with mentoring, clinical cases, and training as the most appreciated facilitating factors. Surgeons show trust in functional leaders, key performance indicators, and the facilitating role played by nurse navigators and case managers. Pancreas units have a high potential to improve patients' outcomes. While the pancreas unit model of care will not change the technical content of pancreatic surgery, it may bring surgeons several benefits, including more cases, professional development, easier coordination, less stress, and opportunities to create fruitful connections with research institutions and industry leaders.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Pavia
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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