Author:
Alzahrani Khalid H.,Abutalib Raid A.,Elsheikh Ahmed M.,Alzahrani Laura K.,Khoshhal Khalid I.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The issue of surgical safety has increased significantly over the last few decades. Several studies have established that it is linked to non-technical performance, rather than clinical competencies. Non-technical skills can be blended with technical training in the surgical profession to improve surgeons’ abilities and enhance patient care and procedural skills. The main goal of this study was to determine orthopedic surgeons’ requirements of non-technical skills, and to identify the most pressing issues.
Methods
We conducted a self-administered online questionnaire survey in this cross-sectional study. The questionnaire was piloted, validated, pretested, and clearly stated the study’s purpose. After the pilot, minor wording and questions were clarified before starting the data collection. Orthopedic surgeons from the Middle East and Northern Africa were invited. The questionnaire was based on a five-point Likert scale, the data were analyzed categorically, and variables were summarized as descriptive statistics.
Results
Of the 1713 orthopedic surgeons invited, 60% completed the survey (1033 out of 1713). The majority demonstrated a high likelihood of participating in such activities in the future (80.5%). More than half (53%) of them preferred non-technical skills courses to be part of major orthopedic conferences, rather than independent courses. Most (65%) chose them to be face-to-face. Although 97.2% agreed on the importance of these courses, only 27% had attended similar courses in the last three years. Patient safety, infection prevention and control, and communication skills were ranked at the top as topics to be addressed. Moreover, participants indicated they would most likely attend courses on infection prevention and control, patient safety and teamwork, and team management.
Conclusion
The results highlight the need for non-technical skills training in the region and the general preferences regarding modality and setting. These findings support the high demand from orthopedic surgeons’ perspective to develop an educational program on non-technical skills.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Education,General Medicine
Cited by
3 articles.
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