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1 the general practitioner and the orthopaedic surgeon.
2 rceived as a threat to the future urological surgeon.
3 edial rectus advancement surgery by a single surgeon.
4 ays of an operative intervention by the same surgeon.
5 l directly affect the role of the urological surgeon.
6 rrently remains under the command of a human surgeon.
7 intravitreal injection was given by a single surgeon.
8 IOLs options are available on the market to surgeons.
9 are and pose a challenge to radiologists and surgeons.
10 oss-validation against annotations by expert surgeons.
11 from 37 countries, 136 institutions and 153 surgeons.
12 ecommended by the American Society of Breast Surgeons.
13 nderrepresented, especially among practicing surgeons.
14 notations were performed by four high-volume surgeons.
15 literature, there is limited uptake amongst surgeons.
16 was similar when rating teams and attending surgeons.
17 ation by experienced Aravind Eye Care System surgeons.
18 ined following reform and 15,041 experienced surgeons.
19 ect was less pronounced for more experienced surgeons.
20 h performed at 1 of 73 hospitals by 1 of 298 surgeons.
21 or hospitals and >= 20 patients per year for surgeons.
22 dure or at the time of cataract surgery by 5 surgeons.
23 ty control and benchmarking of hospitals and surgeons.
24 kload, and improve outcomes for patients and surgeons.
25 are the most preferred 3D printing method by surgeons.
26 were awarded to fewer than 12 Black/AA women surgeons.
27 ompared with low- and medium-volume cataract surgeons (1.34 +/- 0.56; range, 1.00-4.55 and 1.49 +/- 0
28 cluded 137 parents (eight countries) and 245 surgeons (10 countries), the second-round response rates
31 tory surgery centers with in-network primary surgeons, 6.7% (95% CI, 5.8%-7.7%) included an out-of-ne
34 n-network facilities with in-network primary surgeons, a substantial proportion of operations were as
35 ents, addressing team resilience in terms of surgeons' ability to respond to irregularities and to mo
37 surgical leadership, the American College of Surgeon (ACS), American Surgical Association (ASA), Asso
41 he STS-ACC TVT Registry (Society of Thoracic Surgeons-American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Va
42 nalysis of data from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons/American College of Cardiology Transcatheter Va
44 (Society of Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons, Americas Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association,
46 lations, and ANOVA were performed to compare surgeon and patient factors, procedure type, and surgica
48 lity of performance measurements, and engage surgeons and all other stakeholders to work together to
53 ho underwent surgery with in-network primary surgeons and facilities, 20.5% of episodes (95% CI, 19.4
54 itutions will promote proficiency of robotic surgeons and has the potential to positively impact pati
55 this can occur if patients choose in-network surgeons and hospitals but receive out-of-network bills
56 e panel - gastroenterologists, radiologists, surgeons and oncologists -were selected on the basis of
57 stics may be useful in communication between surgeons and patients regarding post-surgical expectatio
58 significant decrease in both the age of our surgeons and patients relative to the same interval in t
72 substantiate that women and ethnic minority surgeons are deserving of additional national leadership
79 ical Association (ASA), Association of Women Surgeons (AWS), and the Society of Black Academic Surgeo
80 ertified surgeons (NBC), and board certified surgeons (BC) was compared using 3D versus 4K display te
83 trospectively assessed by 2 attending breast surgeons, blinded to operator identity, using a video-ba
85 procedures are rarely performed by a single surgeon, but by a surgical team of attending surgeons, s
86 pic surgery which was greater than non-Lapco surgeons by 20.9% (95% CI, 18.5 to 23.3, p<0.001) with a
88 esearch during general surgery residency and surgeons' career paths has not been investigated in a na
89 r first attempt after adjusting for multiple surgeon characteristics (adjusted hazard rate 2.98, 95%
90 t effect on 30-day mortality achieved by new surgeons compared to their more experienced colleagues.
92 als participating in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database (2014-2017) w
93 urgeon wellness and patient experience, less surgeon control over procedures, and difficulty in sched
94 attending corneal surgeon (JMG) and 6 novice surgeons (cornea fellows under supervision) were reviewe
95 pective analysis of the Society for Thoracic Surgeons database for patients undergoing CABG between 2
96 The use of i-OCT affected intraoperative surgeon decision making in 45% and 33% of cases of anter
99 In an analysis of market factors, increased surgeon density, and decreased market competition were a
100 In semistructured interviews, 9 general surgeons discussed their experiences in making entrustme
103 n optimal scheduling scenario that maximizes surgeon efficiency, minimizes OR idle time and revenue l
112 o determine tumor boundaries rely heavily on surgeons' expertise, and final histopathological reports
113 ipity, and the present-day immunologists and surgeons exploring immune transplant tolerance owe much
116 Of the 9139 NIH grants awarded to academic surgeons from 1998 and 2017, 31 (0.34%) grants were awar
119 The impact of the US Surgeon General's The Surgeon General's Call to Action to Prevent Deep Vein Th
122 tion, and American Association of Orthopedic Surgeons' guidelines on dental antibiotic prophylaxis fo
123 and resource utilization, nephrologists and surgeons had 59% (95% confidence interval: 44%, 73%; P <
127 erns are heterogeneous and suggest that most surgeons have to grow their endocrine-specific practice
128 hese trends are understood and considered by surgeons, healthcare administrators, and policy-makers i
130 s into shared decision making by patient and surgeon; however, the incidence of acute incarceration r
131 rmed a cross-sectional analysis of endocrine surgeons identified in the Faculty Practice Solutions Ce
134 resections by Lapco delegates and non-Lapco surgeons in 3-year periods preceding and following Lapco
136 participate if they identified as attending surgeons in an academic setting who work with trainees.
139 nagement from hepato-pancreato-biliary (HPB) surgeons in the ACS-NSQIP HPB Collaborative conducted in
140 peer-scores (2.98 vs 3.79, p = 0.0150) than surgeons in the lowest quartile (n = 6, ratio 0.94).
144 ew placement provides manual feedback to the surgeon, indicating an impending breach if continued dir
145 d with the planned screw trajectory, and the surgeon inserted the Jamshidi needle into the pedicle.
146 824), registered in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons-Interagency Registry for Mechanical Assisted Ci
147 Purposive selection was used to diversify surgeons interviewed across multiple dimensions, includi
151 ndamental task for the facial reconstructive surgeon is to answer that question as it pertains to any
153 K surgeries performed by 1 attending corneal surgeon (JMG) and 6 novice surgeons (cornea fellows unde
154 ating, and the cognitive load experienced by surgeons may have a major impact on patient safety as we
155 ce, 0.19); and were treated by higher-volume surgeons (median range, 111 procedures; interquartile ra
158 ndomly selected from the American College of Surgeons membership, which included questions adapted fr
161 ts at the end of life that may contribute to surgeons' moral distress, particularly when external fac
164 anaging a patient with glioblastoma (GBM), a surgeon must carefully consider whether sufficient tumou
167 l outcomes; however, the American College of Surgeons National Surgery Quality Improvement Program (A
168 was calculated using the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (
170 A single institution's American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program d
172 December 31, 2016 in the American College of Surgeons' National Surgical Quality Improvement Program
173 f medical students (MS), non-board certified surgeons (NBC), and board certified surgeons (BC) was co
175 udies have examined burnout among transplant surgeons, no studies have evaluated burnout in abdominal
176 erienced sexual harassment, whereas 48.6% of surgeons of color witnessed or experienced racial/ethnic
187 n were obtained from the American College of Surgeons Pediatric National Surgical Quality Improvement
195 , 83.2+/-4.3 years; mean Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality score, 4.6+/-2.9%),
196 younger and had a lower Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Operative Mortality score.
197 entifying preoperative opioid use can inform surgeon prescribing and care coordination for pain manag
198 ans with severe obesity, including bariatric surgeons, primary care providers, registered dietitians,
200 nt policies are largely inadequate to ensure surgeon proficiency and may threaten patient safety.
202 uch as a transplant hepatologist, transplant surgeon, psychologist and psychiatrist is becoming manda
203 ary care practitioners, gastroenterologists, surgeons, radiologists, pain specialists, and nutritiona
205 udy in which parents with their children and surgeons rated these outcomes for inclusion in the COS,
208 portant to assess the quality of the patient-surgeon relationship when decisions about surgical proce
214 ers of the American Association of Endocrine Surgeons reviewed and commented on preliminary drafts of
215 orth, Texas, USA) for RRD repair by a single surgeon (RNK) from January 2013 through December 2018.
217 ents to ERAS (experimental) or routine care (surgeon's choice) for pain management (control) over 30-
218 Prospective data was entered into a single surgeon's database containing 5739 laparoscopic cholecys
221 ons (AWS), and the Society of Black Academic Surgeons (SBAS) partnered to address these challenges by
222 Investigator Award (JPIA), which recognizes surgeon-scientists at the "tipping point" of their resea
224 gh-risk patients (median Society of Thoracic Surgeons score 10%) underwent MViV (n=680), MViR (n=123)
225 th cirrhosis, the median Society of Thoracic Surgeons score was 3.8% (1.5, 6.9), and the median Model
227 er than predicted by the Society of Thoracic Surgeons score, and superior short-term outcomes than MV
234 erate-complexity RRD will be chosen naive to surgeon, surgery, and outcome for subgroup analysis.
235 surgeon, but by a surgical team of attending surgeons, surgical assistants, and surgical trainees.
236 traoperative errors and events, variation in surgeons' technical skills, and a high amount of environ
238 equently, the American Society of Transplant Surgeons, the Association of Organ Procurement Organizat
239 a survey to examine the demographics of ACS surgeons, the exclusionary or biased behaviors they witn
240 by high-volume and very high-volume cataract surgeons; the median best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA)
241 ugh follow-up visits decreased by 55.06% for surgeons, there was an increase by 27.36% for advanced p
244 cooperation of parasitologists together with surgeons to avoid life-threatening organ dysfunction.
245 postoperative opioid requirements may allow surgeons to better tailor prescriptions to patient needs
248 nform this concern, Medicare required select surgeons to report on their postoperative visits startin
250 The operations were performed by 2762 new surgeons trained before the reform, 2119 new surgeons tr
251 surgeons trained before the reform, 2119 new surgeons trained following reform and 15,041 experienced
252 s recommendations should provide guidance to surgeons, training programs, hospitals, and professional
257 tamponade for retinal detachment by a single surgeon using different oil viscosities that were follow
258 cipants assessed surgical team and attending surgeon using the NOTSS system after watching ten 20-min
259 , case mix, operating room (OR) utilization, surgeon utilization, idle time and staff overtime hours.
262 cataract procedures performed by high-volume surgeons was 36.9% in 2007, increasing to 68.1% in 2016.
263 iography (ICG-VA) imaging, also operable via SurgeON, we found that direct-LSCI can produce greater i
264 iously been measured, including downsides to surgeon wellness and patient experience, less surgeon co
266 Margin assessments by imaging and by the surgeon were recorded and compared with the intraoperati
270 and December 31, 2017 in the 9 states where surgeons were required to report postoperative visits.
272 d patients treated by new versus experienced surgeons were significantly elevated [odds ratio (OR) 1.
273 amine the conflicting duties of a practicing surgeon who is at high risk for morbidity and mortality
274 We analyzed Medicare FFS claims data from surgeons who billed Medicare for 1 or more of the 293 co
275 ing to compare outcomes across hospitals and surgeons who did and did not meet the Volume Pledge crit
276 license actions was significantly higher for surgeons who failed their first exam attempt [incidence
277 hazard rate for loss-of-license actions for surgeons who failed their first recertification exam wer
278 etween short-term outcomes and hospitals and surgeons who met minimum volume thresholds for lung canc
280 owever leak rates were higher with GBP among surgeons who over-rated their skill with sleeve gastrect
284 This is a retrospective cohort study of 25 surgeons who voluntarily submitted a video of a typical
285 of loss-of-license action rates for general surgeons who were initially certified by the ABS from 19
288 anced endoscopists or hepatopancreatobiliary surgeons with extensive experience in managing and teach
289 n be standardized and successfully taught to surgeons with large experience in donor hepatectomy thro
291 Easy LLRs can be safely performed by most surgeons with minimum expertise in liver surgery and lap
292 cal faculty, 123 (0.79%) were Black/AA women surgeons with only 11 (0.54%) being tenured faculty.
293 Relative performance of new and experienced surgeons with respect to 30-day mortality did not appear
294 Performance Enhancement (SCOPE) program, 46 surgeons within 4 US academic medical centers were assig
295 d patients treated by new versus experienced surgeons within each era, controlling for the hospital,
300 st contribution margin loses ($1,650,000 per surgeon-year) realized with the introduction of policies