Teaching Veterinary Anesthesia and Surgery: The Impact of Instructor Availability on Anesthesia, Operative, and Recovery Times in Dogs Undergoing Ovariohysterectomy or Castration

Veterinary students learning to perform elective ovariohysterectomy (OVH) and castration procedures have traditionally been taught by a few instructors supervising many student groups simultaneously. This study, using a historical control group, explored the impacts of having a dedicated instructor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of veterinary medical education 2014-01, Vol.41 (4), p.390-399
Hauptverfasser: Freeman, Lynetta J, Huse, David, Lee, Rebecca, Inoue, Tomo, Weil, Ann B, Constable, Peter D
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container_end_page 399
container_issue 4
container_start_page 390
container_title Journal of veterinary medical education
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creator Freeman, Lynetta J
Huse, David
Lee, Rebecca
Inoue, Tomo
Weil, Ann B
Constable, Peter D
description Veterinary students learning to perform elective ovariohysterectomy (OVH) and castration procedures have traditionally been taught by a few instructors supervising many student groups simultaneously. This study, using a historical control group, explored the impacts of having a dedicated instructor with each student group for anesthetic induction and an entire surgical procedure. Our hypothesis was that preparation, surgical, and anesthesia times would be shorter and, consequently, post-operative recovery times would be shorter with a dedicated instructor compared to traditional methods. Anesthesia records of dogs undergoing elective surgery by third-year veterinary students were reviewed over 3 consecutive years. Traditional instruction was used in year 1 (Y1), and a dedicated instructor per student group was used in year 2 (Y2) and year 3 (Y3). Anesthesia time, surgical time, recovery time, and pre- and post-operative rectal temperature were analyzed, and a stepwise regression model was developed for factors influencing recovery time. Of 206 records reviewed (Y1, 33; Y2, 98; Y3, 75), there were 101 OVH procedures and 105 castration procedures. Preparation, surgery, and anesthesia times were longer in animals undergoing surgery in Y1, when the traditional instruction method was used. Recovery time was not influenced by instructor assignment. Using dedicated instructors to teach OVH and castration to third-year veterinary students decreased overall anesthesia time by 36 to 49 minutes for OVH and 29 to 32 minutes for castration. A teaching model of dedicated instructors requires excellent coordination between surgeons and anesthesiologists to ensure that a similar number of animals can undergo procedures in the time allotted for teaching.
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subjects Anesthesia - veterinary
Anesthesiology - education
Animals
Dogs
Education, Veterinary - methods
Female
Hysterectomy - education
Hysterectomy - veterinary
Injections, Intramuscular - veterinary
Learning
Male
Orchiectomy - education
Orchiectomy - veterinary
Ovariectomy - education
Ovariectomy - veterinary
Surgery, Veterinary - education
title Teaching Veterinary Anesthesia and Surgery: The Impact of Instructor Availability on Anesthesia, Operative, and Recovery Times in Dogs Undergoing Ovariohysterectomy or Castration
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