Affiliation:
1. Senior Neurosurgical Registrar, Academic Department of Neurosurgery, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds LS1 3EX
2. Academic Clinical Fellow in Neurosurgery, Academic Department of Neurosurgery, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds
3. Senior Consultant Neurosurgeon, Academic Department of Neurosurgery, Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds
Abstract
Detailed thought, knowledge, complex analysis, reasoned judgment and professionalism all fundamentally underpin a surgeon's work and training, yet there is a popularly held view that accomplished surgeons are primarily concerned with performing procedures. A review of pedagogical, social and medical literature, together with personal reflections from the authors, shows that a surgeon's work is multi-faceted. This article discusses the technical skills of operating as a reflection of the ‘tip of the iceberg’ of a surgeon's cognition, the increasingly multidisciplinary strategic approach of surgeons today, the importance of surgical decision making, the influence of robotics, the role of non-medically trained staff, surgeons' role in postoperative care, adaptive expertise and the formation of professional identity. In so doing, a much wider view of a surgeon than simply ‘doing’ or ‘thinking’ is presented with implications for surgical training.
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1 articles.
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