Two-year skill retention and certification exam performance after fundamentals of laparoscopic skills training and proficiency maintenance

Surgery. 2010 Aug;148(2):194-201. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2010.05.012. Epub 2010 Jul 1.

Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to determine 2-year performance retention and certification exam pass rate after completion of a proficiency-based fundamental laparoscopic skills (FLS) curriculum and subsequent interval training.

Methods: Surgery residents (postgraduate year [PGY]1-5, n = 91) were enrolled in an Institutional Review Board approved protocol. All participants initially underwent proficiency-based training on all 5 FLS tasks. Subsequently, available residents were enrolled every 6 months in an ongoing training curriculum that included retention tests on tasks 4 and 5, with mandatory retraining to proficiency if the proficiency levels were not achieved. The final retention test included the actual FLS certification examination for PGY4-5 trainees.

Results: A 96% participation rate was achieved for all curricular components during the 2-year study period (PGY3-5, n = 33). Skill retention at retention 1-4 was 83%, 94%, 98%, and 91% for task 4 and 85%, 95%, 96%, and 100% for task 5, respectively. All PGY4-5 (n = 20) residents passed the FLS certification examination, achieving 413 +/- 28 total score on the skills portion (passing score > or =270) and demonstrating 92% retention for all 5 tasks.

Conclusion: Proficiency-based training with subsequent ongoing practice results in a very high level of skill retention after 2 years and uniformly allows trainees to pass the FLS certification examination.

MeSH terms

  • Certification / standards
  • Clinical Competence*
  • Curriculum
  • Education, Medical, Continuing
  • General Surgery / education*
  • General Surgery / standards
  • Humans
  • Laparoscopy* / standards
  • Societies, Medical
  • Texas
  • Time Factors
  • United States