TY - JOUR
T1 - The first six years of the APSA Travel Fellowship Program
T2 - Impact and lessons learned
AU - McNee, Madeline A.
AU - DeUgarte, Daniel A.
AU - Gerstle, J. Ted
AU - Butler, Marilyn W.
AU - Petroze, Robin
AU - Holterman, Ai Xuan
AU - Velcek, Francisca
AU - Cleary, Muriel
AU - Krishnaswami, Sanjay
AU - Fitzgerald, Tamara N.
N1 - Funding Information:
The Travel Fellowship of the American Pediatric Surgical Association (APSA) was established in 2013 with support from APSA and the APSA Foundation. It is awarded annually to one or two pediatric surgeons from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) [ 1 ]. The award initially aimed to provide financial support for selected applicants to attend the annual APSA meeting, with the primary goal that pediatric surgeons from LMICs would benefit from both educational and networking opportunities. The travel fellowship was the first major initiative of what has become the APSA Global Pediatric Surgery Committee.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Introduction: The American Pediatric Surgical Association (APSA) travel fellowship was established in 2013 to allow pediatric surgeons from low- and middle-income countries to attend the APSA annual meeting. Travel fellows also participated in various clinical and didactic learning experiences during their stay in North America. Methods: Previous travel fellows completed a survey regarding their motivations for participation in the program, its impact on their practice in their home countries, and suggestions for improvement of the fellowship. Results: Eleven surgeons participated in the travel fellowship and attended the annual APSA meetings in 2013–2018. The response rate for survey completion was 100%. Fellows originated from 9 countries and 3 continents and most fellows worked in government practice (n = 8, 73%). Nine fellows (82%) spent > 3 weeks participating in additional learning activities such as courses and clinical observerships. The most common reasons for participation were networking (n = 11, 100%), learning different ways of providing care (n = 10, 90.9%), new procedural techniques (n = 9, 81.8%), exposure to a different medical culture (n = 10, 90.9%), and engaging in research (n = 8, 72.7%). Most of the fellows participated in a structured course: colorectal (n = 6, 55%), laparoscopy (n = 2, 18%), oncology (n = 2, 18%), leadership skills (n = 1, 9%), and safety and quality initiatives (n = 1, 9%). Many fellows participated in focused clinical mentorships: general pediatric surgery (n = 9, 82%), oncology (n = 5, 45%), colorectal (n = 3, 27%), neonatal care (n = 2, 18%) and laparoscopy (n = 2, 18%). Upon return to their countries, fellows reported that they were able to improve a system within their hospital (n = 7, 63%), expand their research efforts (n = 6, 54%), or implement a quality improvement initiative (n = 6, 54%). Conclusions: The APSA travel fellowship is a valuable resource for pediatric surgeons in low- and middle-income countries. After completion of these travel fellowships, the majority of these fellows have implemented important changes in their hospital's health systems, including research and quality initiatives, to improve pediatric surgical care in their home countries. Level of evidence: This is not a clinical study. Therefore, the table that lists levels of evidence for “treatment study”, “prognosis study”, “study of diagnostic test” and “cost effectiveness study” does not apply to this paper.
AB - Introduction: The American Pediatric Surgical Association (APSA) travel fellowship was established in 2013 to allow pediatric surgeons from low- and middle-income countries to attend the APSA annual meeting. Travel fellows also participated in various clinical and didactic learning experiences during their stay in North America. Methods: Previous travel fellows completed a survey regarding their motivations for participation in the program, its impact on their practice in their home countries, and suggestions for improvement of the fellowship. Results: Eleven surgeons participated in the travel fellowship and attended the annual APSA meetings in 2013–2018. The response rate for survey completion was 100%. Fellows originated from 9 countries and 3 continents and most fellows worked in government practice (n = 8, 73%). Nine fellows (82%) spent > 3 weeks participating in additional learning activities such as courses and clinical observerships. The most common reasons for participation were networking (n = 11, 100%), learning different ways of providing care (n = 10, 90.9%), new procedural techniques (n = 9, 81.8%), exposure to a different medical culture (n = 10, 90.9%), and engaging in research (n = 8, 72.7%). Most of the fellows participated in a structured course: colorectal (n = 6, 55%), laparoscopy (n = 2, 18%), oncology (n = 2, 18%), leadership skills (n = 1, 9%), and safety and quality initiatives (n = 1, 9%). Many fellows participated in focused clinical mentorships: general pediatric surgery (n = 9, 82%), oncology (n = 5, 45%), colorectal (n = 3, 27%), neonatal care (n = 2, 18%) and laparoscopy (n = 2, 18%). Upon return to their countries, fellows reported that they were able to improve a system within their hospital (n = 7, 63%), expand their research efforts (n = 6, 54%), or implement a quality improvement initiative (n = 6, 54%). Conclusions: The APSA travel fellowship is a valuable resource for pediatric surgeons in low- and middle-income countries. After completion of these travel fellowships, the majority of these fellows have implemented important changes in their hospital's health systems, including research and quality initiatives, to improve pediatric surgical care in their home countries. Level of evidence: This is not a clinical study. Therefore, the table that lists levels of evidence for “treatment study”, “prognosis study”, “study of diagnostic test” and “cost effectiveness study” does not apply to this paper.
KW - Global surgery
KW - Pediatric surgery education
KW - Travel fellowship
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2020.06.030
DO - 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2020.06.030
M3 - Article
C2 - 32713712
AN - SCOPUS:85088377047
SN - 0022-3468
VL - 56
SP - 862
EP - 867
JO - Journal of Pediatric Surgery
JF - Journal of Pediatric Surgery
IS - 5
ER -