Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== 🧠Neurosurgical Residency Competency ====== [[Neurosurgical residency]] [[competency]] refers to the set of [[knowledge]], [[technical skill]]s, [[clinical judgment]], professional behaviors, and [[ethical standards]] that a neurosurgery resident must develop and demonstrate throughout training to be considered ready for independent neurosurgical practice. 🧬 Core Components of Competency in Neurosurgery (Based on ACGME Framework): Patient Care (PC) – Delivering safe, effective, and compassionate neurosurgical care. Medical Knowledge (MK) – Mastery of neuroanatomy, neuropathology, imaging, and operative indications. Interpersonal and Communication Skills – Collaborating with patients, families, and healthcare teams. Professionalism – Ethical integrity, responsibility, and sensitivity to diverse patient populations. Systems-Based Practice – Navigating healthcare systems efficiently and advocating for quality care. Practice-Based Learning and Improvement (PBLI) – Reflective practice, continuous learning, and evidence-based improvement. 📏 Milestone-Based Evaluation: Competencies are broken into subcompetencies with levels (1–5) to track progress. By the end of PGY-7, residents are expected to reach Level 4 in most domains, indicating readiness for unsupervised practice. ⚠️ Emerging critique: While the framework is comprehensive, critics argue that it: Over-emphasizes standardized metrics, reducing complex surgical growth to scores. Neglects individuality, intuition, and surgical creativity, which are essential to neurosurgical mastery. May mask structural flaws in training programs by shifting accountability to the trainee alone. 📌 In short: [[Neurosurgical residency]] competency = the evolving capacity to care, cut, decide, and reflect — not just according to milestones, but to the real weight of the scalpel. ---- In a retrospective observational cohort study Using national milestone data from 2478 neurosurgery [[resident]]s across 120 U.S. programs (2018–2022), with descriptive [[statistical analysis]] Khalid et al.evaluate the progression of [[neurosurgical resident]]s across the 6 ACGME core competencies and 20 subcompetencies, specifically: Assessing how many residents reach level 4 proficiency by the final year (PGY-7). Identifying patterns of co-occurring deficiencies in competencies. They conclude that neurosurgery residents demonstrate substantial milestone progression throughout [[training]], but gaps remain—particularly in specialized clinical skills and self-assessment ([[Reflective Practice]]). Nearly 45% fail to reach level 4 in at least one subcompetency by PGY-7. These deficiencies are concentrated in areas often covered during [[fellowship]] training (e.g., epilepsy, pain, peripheral nerve). Therefore, residency programs may need to enhance exposure to these areas or redefine competency expectations. The authors recommend: Targeted educational interventions Specialized procedural training To ensure that all residents achieve the necessary competencies for independent practice ((Khalid SI, Mehta AI, Atwal G, Hogan SO, Park YS, Charbel FT. A national study of [[neurosurgical residency]] [[competency]] development. J Neurosurg. 2025 Jun 20:1-7. doi: 10.3171/2025.4.JNS243272. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40540798.)) ---- ==== 🧠1. Conceptual Overreach: Competency as a Bureaucratic Fantasy ==== This study mistakes numerical progression in a [[checklist]] for actual neurosurgical maturity. “[[Milestones]]” are treated as objective truths, when in reality they are administrative fictions imposed top-down by [[ACGME]] to simulate [[accountability]]. The implicit assumption—that every resident must hit an arbitrary “level 4” to be considered competent—is never questioned. The authors do not interrogate what level 4 means, who defines it, or whether it maps to meaningful clinical outcomes. Instead, they deliver descriptive statistics masquerading as insights. ==== 📉 2. Methodological Superficiality: When Big Data Meets Shallow Analysis ==== Despite having access to a national database, the analysis is reductively descriptive. There’s no regression modeling, no correction for confounding variables, and no attempt to validate the milestone system externally. The use of pairwise comparisons and VMR adds noise, not clarity. The failure to contextualize scores within program cultures, case volumes, or faculty variability renders the findings educationally hollow. ==== 🎠3. Educational Pantomime: The Ritual of Reporting Deficiency ==== The finding that 44.6% of residents do not reach level 4 is presented as a failure of training, rather than a failure of the metric itself. The authors seem unaware that not all residents pursue fellowship-level expertise in epilepsy or pain surgery—yet they are penalized for not achieving mastery in these subfields. This reveals a structural disconnect between generalist training and subspecialist benchmarks. It also underscores the [[hubris]] of [[competency]]-based models: trying to compress the unpredictable journey of surgical maturation into a bureaucratic script. ==== 🔄 4. Echo Chamber Feedback Loops ==== Instead of reflecting on the validity of [[ACGME]]’s own framework, the authors recommend—predictably—more interventions, more assessments, and more “[[targeted training]].” This is a self-reinforcing loop of [[bureaucratic optimism]], where the solution to every failed metric is to double down on the metric itself. Not a word is said about [[burnout]], [[moral injury]], or whether this system produces better surgeons—only whether it produces “level 4s.” ==== 🧠Final Diagnosis ==== This paper is not without value—it’s an excellent example of [[educational theater]]: highly structured, outwardly scientific, and entirely performative. It exposes a deep conceptual crisis at the heart of American graduate medical education: the belief that measuring enough things often enough will somehow guarantee competence. If nearly half of graduating neurosurgeons aren’t meeting arbitrary milestones, the [[milestone]] system—not the residents—should be on probation. ===== Competency-based education in neurosurgery ===== [[Competency-based education in neurosurgery]] ===== Peripheral Nerve Surgery Competency ===== [[Peripheral Nerve Surgery Competency]] ===== Spine surgery competency ===== [[Spine surgery competency]] neurosurgical_residency_competency.txt Last modified: 2025/06/21 11:18by administrador