RESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Non-technical skills (NTS) including communication, teamwork, leadership, situational awareness, and decision making, are essential for enhancing surgical safety. Often perceived as tangential soft skills, NTS are many times not included in formal medical education curricula or continuing medical professional development. We aimed to explore exposure of interprofessional teams in North-Central Nigeria to NTS and ascertain perceived facilitators and barriers to interprofessional training in these skills to enhance surgical safety and inform design of a relevant contextualized curriculum. METHODS: Six health facilities characterised by high surgical volumes in Nigeria's North-Central geopolitical zone were purposively identified. Federal, state, and private university teaching hospitals, non-teaching public and private hospitals, and a not-for-profit health facility were included. A nineteen-item, web-based, cross-sectional survey was distributed to 71 surgical providers, operating room nurses, and anaesthesia providers by snowball sampling through interprofessional surgical team leads from August to November 2021. Data were analysed using Fisher's exact test, proportions, and constant comparative methods for free text responses. RESULTS: Respondents included 17 anaesthesia providers, 21 perioperative nurses, and 29 surgeons and surgical trainees, with a 95.7% survey completion rate. Over 96% had never heard of any NTS for surgery framework useful for variable resource contexts and only 8% had ever received any form of NTS training. Interprofessional teams identified communication and teamwork as the most deficient personal skills (38, 57%), and as the most needed for surgical team improvement (45, 67%). There was a very high demand for NTS training by all surgical team members (64, 96%). The main motivations for training were expectations of resultant improved patient safety and improved interprofessional team dynamics. Week-long, hybrid training courses (with combined in-person and online components) were the preferred format for delivery of NTS education. Factors that would facilitate attendance included a desire for patient safety and self-improvement, while barriers to attendance were conflicts of time, and training costs. CONCLUSIONS: Interprofessional surgical teams in the Nigerian context have a high degree of interest in NTS training, and believe it can improve team dynamics, personal performance, and ultimately patient safety. Implementation of NTS training programs should emphasize interprofessional communication and teamworking.
Assuntos
Relações Interprofissionais , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente , Humanos , Estudos Transversais , Nigéria , Masculino , Comunicação , Liderança , Feminino , Currículo , Adulto , Inquéritos e Questionários , Competência ClínicaRESUMO
Background: Prostate cancer is a common malignancy affecting men beyond the middle age. Monitoring of treatment of the disease using serum testosterone and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) offers an index of treatment efficacy and a reflection of disease progression, respectively. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between changing values of serum PSA and serum testosterone in patients with advanced prostate cancer following bilateral total orchidectomy (BTO). Materials and Methods: This was a prospective longitudinal study carried out over a 1-year period among patients who met the inclusion criteria. Each patient underwent detailed clinical evaluation including history, as well as physical examination with digital rectal examination of the prostate. Also, samples of serum PSA and testosterone were obtained and sent to the same chemical pathology laboratory before intervention with BTO, then at 2, 4, and 6 months. The values of serum PSA and testosterone were obtained and changes over this period were compared for both parameters. The analyses included independent inferential analysis of serum testosterone and serum PSA over a period of 6 months and a correlation of the two parameters over the same period. Results were analysed using SPSS version 23. P value of <0.05 was regarded significant. Charts and tables were used for data expression. Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon tests were used for individual inferential analysis of serum testosterone and PSA. The Spearman ranked correlation coefficient test was used to determine the degree of correlation of serum testosterone and serum PSA levels while Pearson correlation coefficient test was used to determine the degree of correlation between the percentage changes in serum testosterone and PSA measured over the period of the study. Results: A total of forty-two men with mean age of 68.49 ± 8.86 years who had advanced prostate cancer were recruited. The histologic type of prostate cancer diagnosed for all the patients was adenocarcinoma. The mean Gleason score was 7.98 ± 1.09, while the modal Gleason grade group represented was grade group 5. There were statistically significant changes in serum testosterone and PSA levels in response to bilateral total orchidectomy with P value of <0.001. However, there was no statistically significant correlation between serum testosterone and serum PSA levels following bilateral total orchidectomy with p values of 0.492, 0.358, 0.134, and 0.842 at baseline, 2, 4, and 6 months, respectively. There was a significant correlation between the percentage changes in serum testosterone and PSA measured between baseline and 2 months with P value of <0.001. However, there was no statistically significant correlation between the percentage changes in serum testosterone and PSA measured between baseline measured against 4 months and 6 months with P value of 0.998 and 0.638, respectively. Conclusion: The study showed that reduction in serum levels of testosterone and PSA following BTO was significant. It also revealed no statistically significant correlation between serum testosterone and serum PSA measured over 6 months following bilateral total orchidectomy.