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Jeffrey Barkun

Researcher at McGill University Health Centre

Publications -  158
Citations -  17262

Jeffrey Barkun is an academic researcher from McGill University Health Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liver transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 149 publications receiving 14118 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey Barkun include McGill University & Halifax.

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The Clavien-Dindo classification of surgical complications: five-year experience.

TL;DR: This 5-year evaluation provides strong evidence that the classification of complications is valid and applicable worldwide in many fields of surgery, and subjective, inaccurate, or confusing terms such as “minor or major” should be removed from the surgical literature.
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Recommendations for laparoscopic liver resection: a report from the second international consensus conference held in Morioka

Go Wakabayashi, +42 more
- 01 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: The Second International Consensus Conference on Laparoscopic Liver Resections (LLR) was held in Morioka, Japan, from October 4 to 6, 2014 to evaluate the current status of laparoscopic liver surgery and to provide recommendations to aid its future development.
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The comprehensive complication index: a novel continuous scale to measure surgical morbidity.

TL;DR: The CCI summarizes all postoperative complications and is more sensitive than existing morbidity endpoints and may serve as a standardized and widely applicable primary endpoint in surgical trials and other interventional fields of medicine.
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Development of a Model for Training and Evaluation of Laparoscopic Skills

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a series of structured tasks to objectively measure laparoscopic skills and used a linear regression model to test for the effects of level of training and practice on performance.
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Evaluation and stages of surgical innovations.

TL;DR: A five-stage paradigm is proposed to describe the development of innovative surgical procedures so that introduction and adoption of surgical innovations can derive from evidence-based principles rather than trial and error.