The Impact of Participating in Surgical Trips to Low Income, Low Resource Countries on Professional Development of Plastic Surgery Trainees

Author:

Le Lamvy T.1ORCID,Borad Vedant1,Schubert Mia M.2,Quillopa Naomi3,Mahajan Ashish Y.14,Heinrich Cherrie A.14,Barta Ruth J.15,Schubert Warren14

Affiliation:

1. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

2. Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada

3. International Humanitarian Surgical Teams, Minneapolis, MN, USA

4. Regions Hospital, Saint Paul, MN, USA

5. Gillette Children’s Specialty Healthcare, Saint Paul, MN, USA

Abstract

Title: The impact of participating in surgical trips to low income, low resource countries on professional development of plastic surgery trainees. Objective: Global health initiatives have increased in popularity in recent years, yet international surgical volunteerism remains controversial. Though many U.S. residencies incorporate global health initiatives, there is no standardization of the role that surgical volunteerism plays in resident education. Our goal was to evaluate the impact of surgical volunteerism on former plastic surgery trainees during and after residency. Methods: An electronic survey was distributed to 35 graduates of the plastic surgery residency program at the University of Minnesota between 1991 and 2019. The survey included 28 yes/no questions and free responses. The response rate was 100% (n = 35). Results: 34 of 35 former graduates (97.1%) participated in at least one international surgical trip during residency. All participants had exposure to cleft surgery, and 82.4% reported a predominance of cleft cases. 23.5% of graduates have continued to perform cleft surgery as part of their practice, and 47.1% have continued to embark on surgical trips post-residency. Participants reported that volunteering on international surgical trips have made them more adaptable in the operating room (91.2%), gave them a better understanding of the challenges of poverty (97.1%), and helped them to provide better care for marginalized patients in low resource settings (70.6%). One hundred percent of participants reported that international surgical trips were an important part of their residency training (n = 34). Conclusions: International surgical volunteer work can provide an invaluable experience during training, and they should be offered by plastic surgery residency programs. Supporting resident involvement in surgical trips can have long term ramifications in their careers and commitment to helping the underserved.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Mathematics,General Mathematics

Reference32 articles.

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