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Non-technical skills for surgeons in the operating room: a review of the literature.

Yule S, Flin R, Paterson-Brown S, Maran N

School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom. s.j.yule@abdn.ac.uk

BACKGROUND: This review examines the surgical and psychological literature on surgeons' intraoperative non-technical skills. These are the critical cognitive and interpersonal skills that complement surgeons' technical abilities. The objectives of this paper are (1) to identify the non-technical skills required by surgeons in the operating room and (2) assess the behavioral marker systems that have been developed for rating surgeons' non-technical skills. METHODS: A literature search was conducted against a set of inclusion criteria. Databases searched included BioMed Central, Medline, EDINA BIOSIS, Web-of-Knowledge, PsychLit, and ScienceDirect. RESULTS: A number of "core" categories of non-technical skills were identified from 4 sources of data: questionnaire and interview studies, observational studies, adverse event analyses, and the surgical education/competence assessment literature. The main skill categories were communication, teamwork, leadership, and decision making. The existing frameworks used to measure surgeons' non-technical skills were found to be deficient in terms of either their psychometric properties or suitability for rating the full range of skills in individual surgeons. CONCLUSIONS: Further work is required to develop a valid taxonomy of individual surgeons' non-technical skills for training and feedback.

Published 3 February 2006 in Surgery, 139(2): 140-9.
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Cognition Research Today Archive:

Volume 1 (2005)
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Volume 2 (2006)
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