Virtual surgical education for core surgical trainees in the Yorkshire deanery during the COVID-19 pandemic

Author:

Laloo Ryan1ORCID,Giorga Andrea1,Williams Andrew2,Biyani Chandra Shekhar1ORCID,Yiasemidou Marina3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Academic Clinical Fellow in Vascular Surgery, Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, UK

2. General Surgery ST2, Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, UK

3. General Surgery registrar, Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, UK *Ryan Laloo and Andrea Giorga were both first co-authors.

Abstract

Background and Aims An online teaching programme for Core Surgical Trainees (CSTs) was designed and delivered during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study is to assess the feasibility and the reception of a fully online teaching programme. Methods Twenty teaching sessions were delivered either via Zoom™ or were pre-recorded and uploaded onto a Google Classroom™ and YouTube™ website. Online feedback, delivered via Google Forms™, were completed by CSTs following each teaching session. YouTube Studio™ analytics were used to understand patterns in viewing content. Results 89.9% of trainees were satisfied with the teaching series. Trainees preferred short, weekly sessions (79%), delivered by senior surgeons, in the form of both didactical and interactive teaching. YouTube analytics revealed that the highest peak in views was documented on the weekend before the deadline for evidence upload on the Intercollegiate Surgical Collegiate Programme (ISCP) portfolio. Conclusion An entirely online teaching programme is feasible and well-received by CSTs. Trainees preferred live, interactive, procedure-based, consultant-led sessions lasting approximately thirty minutes to one hour and covering a myriad of surgical specialties. This feedback can be used to improve future online surgical teaching regionally and nationally in order to gain training opportunities lost during the pandemic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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