Training surgical residents for a career in academic global surgery: A novel training model Article

Swain, JD, Matousek, AC, Scott, JW et al. (2015). Training surgical residents for a career in academic global surgery: A novel training model . JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 72(4), e104-e110. 10.1016/j.jsurg.2015.01.007

cited authors

  • Swain, JD; Matousek, AC; Scott, JW; Cooper, Z; Smink, DS; Bolman, RM; Finlayson, SRG; Zinner, MJ; Riviello, R

authors

abstract

  • Academic global surgery is a nascent field focused on improving surgical care in resource-poor settings through a broad-based scholarship agenda. Although there is increasing momentum to expand training opportunities in low-resource settings among academic surgical programs, most focus solely on establishing short-term elective rotations rather than fostering research or career development. Given the complex nature of surgical care delivery and programmatic capacity building in the resource-poor settings, many challenges remain before global surgery is accepted as an academic discipline and an established career path. Brigham and Women's Hospital has established a specialized global surgery track within the general surgery residency program to develop academic leaders in this growing area of need and opportunity. Here we describe our experience with the design and development of the program followed by practical applications and lessons learned from our early experiences.

publication date

  • July 1, 2015

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • e104

end page

  • e110

volume

  • 72

issue

  • 4