Harmonizing ophthalmic residency surgical training across Europe: A proposed surgical curriculum.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_427A52E3A40E
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Harmonizing ophthalmic residency surgical training across Europe: A proposed surgical curriculum.
Journal
Eye
Author(s)
González-Andrades M., Fung SSM, Potic J., Chidambaram J.D., Karimi A., Quigley C., Pontoppidan-Toms R., Scott A., Rasmussen MLR
ISSN
1476-5454 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0950-222X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
37
Number
15
Pages
3256-3262
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
One of the core aims of the European Union of Medical Specialists is to harmonize training across Europe by creating European Training Requirements for all medical specialties including Ophthalmology. The theoretical part is already defined by the EBO, however as ophthalmology also includes surgical skills, we herein propose a surgical minimum curriculum for ophthalmology residents in Europe.
National and international ophthalmic training curricula which are publicly available in English were reviewed and compared. The final proposal was created from 5 criteria: 1. Disease prevalence; 2. Patient safety; 3. Case-trainee ratio; 4. Skill transfer; and 5. Technical difficulty.
In total 7 different training curricula from across the world were compared. Among the surgical procedures, cataract surgery has the highest median number of procedures required to be completed during residency: 86 procedures (50-350). Followed by oculoplastics: 28 procedures (10-40) and panretinal photocoagulation: 27.5 procedures (10-49) Full procedural competence is proposed in 9 surgical skills, including YAG laser posterior capsulotomy, retinal argon laser, intravitreal injection, corneal foreign body removal, removal of corneal sutures, facial and periocular laceration repair, eyelid laceration repair, minor eyelid procedures, and punctal occlusion. These procedures are deemed essential and feasible for all ophthalmology residents in Europe to perform independently upon completion of their training.
This proposal should be regarded as a recommendation based on comparable surgical curricula in use worldwide to establish standards across European countries and may serve as valuable insight to those responsible for compiling ETRs for ophthalmology, or their national curriculums.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
24/03/2023 13:13
Last modification date
19/12/2023 8:13
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