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Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues

The introduction of a certification / diploma program in Minimal Invasive Surgery (MIS) is expected to improve surgical performance, patient’s safety and outcome. The Gynaecological Endoscopic Surgical Education and Assessment programme (GESEA) and the ESHRE Certification for Reproductive Endoscopic...

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Autores principales: Tanos, V, Socolov, R, Demetriou, P, Kyprianou, M, Watrelot, A, Van Belle, Y, Campo, R
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Universa Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5130300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27909568
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author Tanos, V
Socolov, R
Demetriou, P
Kyprianou, M
Watrelot, A
Van Belle, Y
Campo, R
author_facet Tanos, V
Socolov, R
Demetriou, P
Kyprianou, M
Watrelot, A
Van Belle, Y
Campo, R
author_sort Tanos, V
collection PubMed
description The introduction of a certification / diploma program in Minimal Invasive Surgery (MIS) is expected to improve surgical performance, patient’s safety and outcome. The Gynaecological Endoscopic Surgical Education and Assessment programme (GESEA) and the ESHRE Certification for Reproductive Endoscopic Surgery (ECRES) provides a structured learning path, recognising different pillars of competence. In order to achieve a high level of competence a two steps validation is necessary: (a) the individual should be certified of having the appropriate theoretical knowledge and (b) the endoscopic psychomotor skills before entering in the diploma programme reflecting the surgical competence. The influence of such an educational and credentialing path could improve safety and offer financial benefits to the hospitals, physicians and healthcare authorities. Moreover the medicolegal consequences can be important when a significant amount of surgeons possess the different diplomas. As the programs are becoming universally accessible, recognised as the best scientific standard, included in the continuous medical education (CME) and continuous professional development (CPD), it is expected that a significant number of surgeons will soon accomplish the diploma path. The co-existence and practice of both non-certified and certified surgeons with different degrees of experience is unavoidable. However, it is expected that national health systems (NHS), hospitals and insurance companies will demand and hire doctors with high and specific proficiency to endoscopic surgery. When medico-legal cases are under investigation, the experts should be aware of the limitations that individual experience provides. The court first of all examines and then judges if there is negligence and decides accordingly. However, lack of certification may be considered as negligence by a surgeon operating a case that eventual faces litigation problems. Patients’ safety and objective preoperative counselling are mandatory, directly connected to MIS certification while eliminating any dispute of surgeons’ credibility.
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spelling pubmed-51303002016-12-01 Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues Tanos, V Socolov, R Demetriou, P Kyprianou, M Watrelot, A Van Belle, Y Campo, R Facts Views Vis Obgyn Viewpoint The introduction of a certification / diploma program in Minimal Invasive Surgery (MIS) is expected to improve surgical performance, patient’s safety and outcome. The Gynaecological Endoscopic Surgical Education and Assessment programme (GESEA) and the ESHRE Certification for Reproductive Endoscopic Surgery (ECRES) provides a structured learning path, recognising different pillars of competence. In order to achieve a high level of competence a two steps validation is necessary: (a) the individual should be certified of having the appropriate theoretical knowledge and (b) the endoscopic psychomotor skills before entering in the diploma programme reflecting the surgical competence. The influence of such an educational and credentialing path could improve safety and offer financial benefits to the hospitals, physicians and healthcare authorities. Moreover the medicolegal consequences can be important when a significant amount of surgeons possess the different diplomas. As the programs are becoming universally accessible, recognised as the best scientific standard, included in the continuous medical education (CME) and continuous professional development (CPD), it is expected that a significant number of surgeons will soon accomplish the diploma path. The co-existence and practice of both non-certified and certified surgeons with different degrees of experience is unavoidable. However, it is expected that national health systems (NHS), hospitals and insurance companies will demand and hire doctors with high and specific proficiency to endoscopic surgery. When medico-legal cases are under investigation, the experts should be aware of the limitations that individual experience provides. The court first of all examines and then judges if there is negligence and decides accordingly. However, lack of certification may be considered as negligence by a surgeon operating a case that eventual faces litigation problems. Patients’ safety and objective preoperative counselling are mandatory, directly connected to MIS certification while eliminating any dispute of surgeons’ credibility. Universa Press 2016-06-27 2016-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5130300/ /pubmed/27909568 Text en Copyright © 2016 Facts, Views & Vision http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Viewpoint
Tanos, V
Socolov, R
Demetriou, P
Kyprianou, M
Watrelot, A
Van Belle, Y
Campo, R
Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title_full Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title_fullStr Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title_short Implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
title_sort implementation of minimal invasive gynaecological surgery certification will challenge gynaecologists with new legal and ethical issues
topic Viewpoint
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5130300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27909568
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