This book delineates surgical education as a new and emerging field of academic enquiry. Surgical (as opposed to medical) education is emerging as a distinct field with its own identity. Surgeons have started to professionalise their educational role, and draw professional, non-surgeon educators into the field.
Surgery is a near unique environment of learning and practice. The defining characteristic of ‘surgical’ specialties is the performance of invasive procedures, (alongside the myriad of diagnostic and other elements which are shared with other clinicians). This craft component is central to the surgeon’s role, as is teamworking. Yet the unique characteristics of this field have been little addressed from an educational perspective, nor have its possibilities as a new research domain been mapped. This book thus seeks to explore surgical education from a number of dimensions, and draw attention to theorising it and establishing its epistemological foundations.At the same time it points to the essential links between theory and practice.
Surgical education is important and the initiative timely; the two main co-authors use their combined perspectives and expertise to map the domain’s co-ordinates. Complementing this strong sense of direction are invited chapters from carefully selected contributors, each an outstanding expert in his or her field. This book is aimed at surgeons, other clinicians, non-clinicians, educators, and others interested in this new domain.
Heather Fry
Clinical reasoning Holistic Simulation Medical Education Patient Focused Simulation Reflective Practice Surgical Team Working Surgical education Surgical simulation Technical Expertise Threshold concepts
From the reviews:
“This volume in the Advances in Medical Education series is dedicated to surgical education. … It is aimed at surgeons, other clinicians, nonclinicians, educators, and others interested in this new domain. … Since the book focuses on surgical education and tries to elaborate different aspects and approaches to this wide and complex field, it is unique. … it is useful resource for surgeons and educators (surgical or nonsurgical) who have an interest in educational research and administration.” (Hisakazu Hoshi, Doody’s Review Service, April, 2012)