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.

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.

Consistent performance is essential for:

  • Patient trust and institutional reputation
  • Accreditation and quality assurance
  • Training program evaluation
  • Resource planning and scheduling

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

The ultimate objective is to achieve low-variance, high-quality performance. CUSUM supports this by helping to:

  • Detect instability early
  • Intervene before complications accumulate
  • Validate improvements over time
  • performance_consistency.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/04/08 18:00
  • by 127.0.0.1