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      Resident self-assessment of operative performance.

      American journal of surgery
      Animals, Benchmarking, methods, Clinical Competence, standards, Educational Measurement, Endoscopy, Digestive System, Fundoplication, Gastroesophageal Reflux, surgery, Humans, Internship and Residency, Program Evaluation, Reproducibility of Results, Self-Evaluation Programs, Swine, Videotape Recording

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          Abstract

          In medicine, the development of expertise requires the recognition of one's capabilities and limitations. This study aimed to verify the accuracy of self-assessment for the performance of a surgical task, and to determine whether self-assessment may be improved through self-observation or exposure to relevant standards of performance. Twenty-six senior surgical residents were videotaped performing a laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication in a pig. Experts rated the videos using two scoring systems. Subjects evaluated their performances after performance of the Nissen, after self-observation of their videotaped performance, and after review of four videotaped "benchmark" performances. Expert interrater reliability was 0.66 (intraclass correlation coefficient). The correlation between experts' and residents' self-evaluations was initially moderate (r = 0.50, P <0.01), increasing significantly after the residents reviewed their own videotaped performance to r = 0.63 (Deltar = 0.13, P <0.01), yet did not change after review of the benchmarks. Self-observation of videotaped performance improved the residents' ability to self-evaluate.

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