TY - JOUR
T1 - EQIP's First Year
T2 - A Step Closer to Higher Quality in Surgical Education
AU - EQIP consortium
AU - Joshi, Amit R.T.
AU - Nfonsam, Valentine
AU - Relles, Daniel M.
AU - Murphy, Shawn
AU - Ciolkosz, John
AU - Fise, Tom
AU - Klingensmith, Mary E.
AU - Hickey, Mark
AU - Brunsvold, Melissa E.
AU - Korndorffer, James R.
AU - Jarman, Benjamin T.
AU - Smink, Douglas S.
AU - Terhune, Kyla
AU - Kmiec, Kathryn
AU - Harrington, David T.
AU - Edhayan, Elango
AU - DiSiena, Michael
AU - Kent, Tara
AU - Rubino, Matthew
AU - Prabhu, Ajita
AU - Rosenkranz, Kari
AU - Brown, Carlos
AU - Edelman, David
AU - Srinivasan, Jahnavi
AU - Cagir, Burt
AU - Surick, Burton
AU - Neville, Angela
AU - Choi, Jennifer N.
AU - Yeung, Louise
AU - Cassaro, Sebastiano
AU - Iverson, Kyle
AU - Nepomnayshy, Dmitry
AU - Namm, Jukes
AU - Dorion, Heath
AU - Truitt, Michael
AU - Hope, William
AU - Berman, Russell
AU - Harzman, Alan
AU - Kothuru, Ravi
AU - Feinman, Marcie
AU - Hoey, Brian
AU - Dresner, Lisa
AU - Williams, Mark
AU - Chojnacki, Karen
AU - Schroll, Rebecca
AU - Nehler, Mark
AU - Sarosi, George
AU - Porter, Michael
AU - Kavic, Stephen
AU - LaFemina, Jennifer
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Association of Program Directors in Surgery
PY - 2022/11/1
Y1 - 2022/11/1
N2 - OBJECTIVE: To describe the first year of the Educational Quality Improvement Program (EQIP) DESIGN: The Educational Quality Improvement Program (EQIP) was formed by the Association of Program Directors in Surgery (APDS) in 2018 as a continuous educational quality improvement program. Over 18 months, thirteen discrete goals for the establishment of EQIP were refined and executed through a collaborative effort involving leaders in surgical education. Alpha and beta pilots were conducted to refine the data queries and collection processes. A highly-secure, doubly-deidentified database was created for the ingestion of resident and program data. Setting & Participants: 36 surgical training programs with 1264 trainees and 1500 faculty members were included in the dataset. 51,516 ERAS applications to programs were also included. Uni- and multi-variable analysis was then conducted. RESULTS: EQIP was successfully deployed within the timeline described in 2020. Data from the ACGME, ABS, and ERAS were merged with manually entered data by programs and successfully ingested into the EQIP database. Interactive dashboards have been constructed for use by programs to compare to the national cohort. Risk-adjusted multivariable analysis suggests that increased time in a technical skills lab was associated with increased success on the ABS's Qualifying Examination, alone. Increased time in a technical skills lab and the presence of a formal teaching curriculum were associated with increased success on both the ABS's Qualifying and Certifying Examination. Program type may be of some consequence in predicting success on the Qualifying Examination. CONCLUSIONS: The APDS has proved the concept that a highly secure database for the purpose of continuous risk-adjusted quality improvement in surgical education can be successfully deployed. EQIP will continue to improve and hopes to include an increasing number of programs as the barriers to participation are overcome.
AB - OBJECTIVE: To describe the first year of the Educational Quality Improvement Program (EQIP) DESIGN: The Educational Quality Improvement Program (EQIP) was formed by the Association of Program Directors in Surgery (APDS) in 2018 as a continuous educational quality improvement program. Over 18 months, thirteen discrete goals for the establishment of EQIP were refined and executed through a collaborative effort involving leaders in surgical education. Alpha and beta pilots were conducted to refine the data queries and collection processes. A highly-secure, doubly-deidentified database was created for the ingestion of resident and program data. Setting & Participants: 36 surgical training programs with 1264 trainees and 1500 faculty members were included in the dataset. 51,516 ERAS applications to programs were also included. Uni- and multi-variable analysis was then conducted. RESULTS: EQIP was successfully deployed within the timeline described in 2020. Data from the ACGME, ABS, and ERAS were merged with manually entered data by programs and successfully ingested into the EQIP database. Interactive dashboards have been constructed for use by programs to compare to the national cohort. Risk-adjusted multivariable analysis suggests that increased time in a technical skills lab was associated with increased success on the ABS's Qualifying Examination, alone. Increased time in a technical skills lab and the presence of a formal teaching curriculum were associated with increased success on both the ABS's Qualifying and Certifying Examination. Program type may be of some consequence in predicting success on the Qualifying Examination. CONCLUSIONS: The APDS has proved the concept that a highly secure database for the purpose of continuous risk-adjusted quality improvement in surgical education can be successfully deployed. EQIP will continue to improve and hopes to include an increasing number of programs as the barriers to participation are overcome.
KW - APDS
KW - Educational Quality Improvement
KW - Risk-adjusted
KW - Surgical Residency
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134743688&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85134743688&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jsurg.2022.05.018
DO - 10.1016/j.jsurg.2022.05.018
M3 - Article
C2 - 35842405
AN - SCOPUS:85134743688
SN - 1931-7204
VL - 79
SP - e173-e180
JO - Journal of Surgical Education
JF - Journal of Surgical Education
IS - 6
ER -