Differences in operative self-assessment between male and female plastic surgery residents: A survey of 8,149 cases.

American journal of surgery 2021 Vol.221(4) p. 799-803

Cooney CM, Aravind P, Lifchez SD, Hultman CS, Weber RA, Brooke S, Cooney DS

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Previous studies show female residents tend to underrate and male residents to overrate their own performance. We sought to determine if plastic surgery resident trainee self-evaluations differ by resident sex.

[METHODS] We extracted Operative Entrustability Assessment (OEA) data for plastic surgery programs from MileMarker™, a program capable of storing assessment data for CPT-coded procedures. Complete OEAs contain a trainee self-assessment and attending surgeon assessment. We used simple statistics and linear regression to assess differences, stratifying by trainee sex and post-graduate year (PGY).

[RESULTS] We analyzed 8149 OEAs from 3 training programs representing 64 residents (25% female) and 51 attendings. Compared to attending assessments, both male and female residents significantly underrated their performance during PGY1. However, during PGY2-6 male residents' self-evaluations were significantly higher and female residents' self-evaluations significantly lower than their attending evaluations.

[CONCLUSIONS] Results demonstrated female plastic surgery residents underestimated and male residents overestimated their performance. Further studies are needed to determine reasons for these differences.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
약물 OEA → Operative Entrustability Assessment scispacy 1
약물 [BACKGROUND] scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] scispacy 1
질환 OEAs scispacy 1
기타 male scispacy 1
기타 female scispacy 1
기타 PGY2-6 scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Adult; Clinical Competence; Education, Medical, Graduate; Female; Humans; Internship and Residency; Male; Self-Assessment; Sex Factors; Surgery, Plastic