Performance consistency refers to the ability of a surgeon or surgical team to maintain a stable level of technical quality and patient safety over time.
In clinical practice, consistency is often more important than isolated excellence. A surgeon who performs reliably across cases offers greater safety and predictability than one whose outcomes are highly variable.
Measuring Consistency with CUSUM
CUSUM analysis allows for fine-grained tracking of consistency:
A flat or gently declining CUSUM curve indicates stable, expected outcomes.
Sharp upward trends may reveal episodic deterioration or variation in technique.
Sudden improvements may correspond with milestone learning events or process changes.
Why It Matters
Consistent performance is essential for:
Patient trust and institutional reputation
Accreditation and quality assurance
Training program evaluation
Resource planning and scheduling
Common Causes of Inconsistency
CUSUM may reveal performance inconsistency due to:
Fatigue, shift overload, or burnout
Variability in case complexity or patient factors
Learning phase or lack of supervision
Equipment changes or protocol deviations
Goal of Surgical Monitoring
The ultimate objective is to achieve low-variance, high-quality performance. CUSUM supports this by helping to: