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'This has to change': Surgeon pain, disability on the rise

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Surgery as a performance sport

We rarely think of surgeons as athletes and certainly we sometimes don’t look like athletes, but surgery is a performance sport that includes strength and grace. Many surgeons are also very active outside the OR. So, not only OR activity but all the other activities are stacked upon our bodies. Posture, strength training, and ergonomics need to be part of our training just as it would for a pitcher for the Kansas City Royals. You wouldn’t expect the pitcher’s arm to last long without coaching and training physically. That player’s career would be shortened. Why would we expect surgeons to be different? Our game is 90% mental, but the other half is physical (with respect to Yogi Berra).

Dr. Tyler G. Hughes, clinical professor in the department of surgery and director of medical education at Kansas University Medical School, Salina

Dr. Tyler G. Hughes

Tyler G. Hughes, MD, FACS, is clinical professor in the department of surgery and director of medical education at Kansas University School of Medicine–Salina, and coeditor of ACS Surgery News.


 

Micro breaks can help

What’s the solution? Dr. Park says that some fixes are low tech, and can be put in place immediately. He and his team implemented a series of brief breaks, taken every half hour during a procedure, that they dubbed “targeted stretching micro breaks.” These are 45- to 50-second breaks during which a series of exercise physiologist–designed brief stretches are undertaken that do not require breaking scrub.

In a study of 66 surgeons and operating room staff, Dr. Park, chair of the department of surgery at Anne Arundel Medical Center, Annapolis, Md., and his collaborators found that surgeons reported less pain and fatigue, and improved mental focus, when they took micro breaks during a procedure. When surgeons took micro breaks, operative time was no longer than when they didn’t take the breaks (Ann Surg. 2017 Feb;265[2]:340-6).

“We do this all the time in our operating room now,” said Dr. Park. “And it makes a difference in terms of pain, in terms of alertness, in terms of stamina. And it costs nothing.”

Major redesign of tools and workspace

Other targets for technological improvement include offering better-designed handles for laparoscopic instruments. “We’ve had one size fits all forever. Why has it taken us so long to recognize that there’s not one size of surgical hand?” asked Dr. Park. He made the point that the influx of women – whose hands are smaller on average than men’s – into the surgical professions makes this a particularly pressing issue.

“The high-tech piece is going to be a better understanding of the operative work flow,” said Dr. Park, calling for “a meaningful revisiting of the surgeon-device interface and the surgeon-patient interface.”

A fundamental redesign of the operating room will eventually be in order, he said, contrasting the surgeon’s environments with that of an airline pilot. In the cockpit, the pilot sees a “heads-up” display of a limited amount of data, with an eye to controlling the cognitive workload for the operator. By contrast, said Dr. Park, in the OR, there are “lights flashing, and things pinging,” and pieces of equipment don’t “talk” to each other, presenting sometimes overwhelming sensory input that just potentiates the stress of the environment. Operating room design, he said, should move toward an ergonomically improved and stimulus-controlled environment.

As the leader of the surgical team, and as a physician whose foremost concern is the patient on the table, the surgeon may inadvertently have fallen into a role where his or her well-being is neglected.

Dr. Park suggested that, in the surgical profession, “it has never felt safe or appropriate to talk about ourselves.” But for the good of the profession, and ultimately for patient care, “this has to change.”

Ms. Epstein and her coauthors reported no conflicts of interest. .

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