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In this issue of Hand Clinics, guest editors Drs. Youssra Marjoua and Kevin C. Chung bring their considerable expertise to the topic of Surgical Education. In a changing healthcare environment and with access to new virtual and simulation tools of education, our approach to surgical training warrants consideration of novel teaching methods as well as review of the principles. To design the future of surgical education we also must study our history. In this issue, top experts equip the reader with an understanding of the foundations of surgical training, and the innovative training approaches that may alter our teaching methods.
The Foundational Principles of Surgical Education in the United StatesThe Evolution of Surgery and Surgical Education in the Past 100 YearsThe Role of Simulation-Based Medical Education in Surgical TrainingThe Use of Video-Assisted Deliberate Practice in Improving Surgeon SkillsTime-Based Versus Competency-Based Surgical Education and TrainingTeaching Surgery Through Immediate Preoperative Small-Group DiscussionsVariations in Residency Surgical Training Across Institutions and Impact on Quality of TrainingThe Use of Extended Reality to Improve Upper Extremity Surgical Training and Shorten the Learning CurveGlobal Variations in Hand-Surgical TrainingHow Do We Measure Our Competence: Objective Measures of Assessing Surgical TrainingThe Role of Cadaver-Based Laboratories Versus 3 Dimensional Virtual Training in Surgical TeachingTeaching Basic Surgical Technique: Addressing Pitfalls and Challenges of Surgical Training in the Modern WorldThe Art of Mental Simulation in Surgical ConductThe Impact of Duty Hour Restrictions on Orthopedic Surgical TrainingHow Should Teachers Teach?
John van Aalst, Babak Mehrara, Joseph J Disa, Gordon Lee, Arun Gosain, MD van Aalst, Dr. John, Dr. Babak Mehrara, FACS Disa, Joseph J, MD, Dr. Arun Gosain, Kevin C. Chung, John Van Aalst