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Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparison of the Long-Term Surgical Outcomes of Horizontal Strabismus Surgery between Resident Clinic and Private Clinic Patients

TLDR
This study showed a similar success rate of horizontal strabismus surgery performed in a PC setting by staff surgeons as compared to that performed in an OPD setting by residents at 6 months and 1 year, and a significantly higher success rate was observed at long term follow-up in the PC group compared to the OPD group.
Abstract
ABSTRACT Purpose To compare the long-term surgical outcomes of patients with horizontal strabismus whose surgery was performed in an outpatient department (OPD) setting (by residents-in-training) to those whose surgery was performed in a private clinic (PC) setting (by staff-ophthalmologists) in the same operating room/institution. Methods Two hundred and forty-four patients’ charts who had horizontal strabismus surgeries from January 2007 to 2020 were reviewed retrospectively. A total of 92 patients were operated on by residents and followed in OPD, and 152 patients by staff-surgeons and followed in PC. Demographic data and eye exam parameters were collected. Distance and near deviation (in prism diopters, PD) were extracted and compared between groups at baseline and postoperatively (6 months and yearly for up to 6 years). Success was defined as a postoperative motor alignment of 10PD or less. Results The mean age of the 244 patients was 10.5 ± 11.7 years, with no significant differences between groups. A longer follow-up duration was reported in the PC group (34.9 ± 24.3 months vs 25.3 ± 20.2 months). Patients had similar success rates in both groups in the early postoperative period (6 months and 1 year); however, a higher success rate was observed in the PC group compared to OPD at 3, 5 and 6 years with the following respective values: 72.2% vs 50% (p < .001), 75% vs. 66.7% (p = .02), and 68.6% vs. 66.7% (p = .03). The difference was more pronounced in the esotropia subgroup mostly at 3 years follow-up. Conclusion This study showed a similar success rate of horizontal strabismus surgery performed in a PC setting by staff surgeons as compared to that performed in an OPD setting by residents at 6 months and 1 year. A significantly higher success rate was observed at long term follow-up (after 2 years) in the PC group compared to the OPD group, possibly related to the difference in compliance with post-operative follow-up management and not to surgery itself.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus

TL;DR: One that the authors will refer to break the boredom in reading is choosing pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus as the reading material.
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A systematic review of the effects of residency training on patient outcomes.

TL;DR: A systematic review of residency training and graduate medical education and patient outcomes found that adequate supervision, room for extra operation time, and evaluation of and attention to the individual competence of residents throughout residency training could positively serve patient outcomes.
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Long-term motor and sensory outcomes after early surgery for infantile esotropia.

TL;DR: Early surgery was associated with a higher prevalence of fusion and stereopsis, without adverse motor outcomes, and was followed for 4-17 years.
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Patients' willingness to allow residents to learn to practice medical procedures.

TL;DR: The majority of patients do not know that they might be the first patient on whom a resident performs a procedure, and more than two thirds believed they should be told if they are the first patients.
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Perspective: the unintended consequences of training residents in dysfunctional outpatient settings.

TL;DR: Current proposals continue the trend of increasing ambulatory exposure through providing more clinical hours in the outpatient setting as a pedagogic strategy to improve residents' practical skills in providing quality care in outpatient settings.
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