TY - JOUR T1 - Trauma Resident Exposure in Canada and Operative Numbers (TraumaRECON): a study protocol for a national multicentre study of operative, nonoperative and structured educational exposures in Canada JF - CMAJ Open JO - CMAJ SP - E715 LP - E721 DO - 10.9778/cmajo.20190185 VL - 8 IS - 4 AU - Qian Shi AU - Angela Coates AU - Paul T. Engels AU - Timothy J. Rice A2 - , Y1 - 2020/10/01 UR - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/8/4/E715.abstract N2 - Background: Canada’s shift toward nonoperative trauma management, coupled with the implementation of competency-based medical education, has highlighted the lack of quantitative knowledge about the volume and quality of exposure to operative trauma training experiences among Canadian general surgery residents. We aim to quantify the exposure to specific operative trauma domains during residency over time and across participating Canadian training programs and to perform an environmental scan of the nonoperative clinical exposure and other formal and informal trauma education provided to general surgery residents across Canadian training programs.Methods: Trauma Resident Exposure in Canada and Operative Numbers (TraumaRECON) is a retrospective, multicentre study of operative trauma procedures involving the participation of general surgery residents in Canada. Participating sites will populate a data abstraction form outlining operative trauma data points as abstracted from eligible trauma operative charts via each site’s trauma registry. They will also complete a survey of the nonoperative clinical and other educational opportunities in trauma care to which general surgery residents are exposed in participating general surgery training programs. The primary outcome of this study will be the volume of operative trauma cases that general surgery residents are exposed to during their residency in Canada. Secondary outcomes will include the association between time of occurrence during the day for trauma operations and resident participation, operative volume stratified by postgraduate year of training, volume of missed operative trauma opportunities, volume of operative trauma cases by type, and the operative role of residents involved in trauma operations.Interpretation: The need for competency in operative trauma management will always exist; however, with potentially limited operative trauma volume, this standard may prove difficult to achieve for the next generation of general surgery residents in Canada. Results of TraumaRECON will provide a quantitative commentary on the operative trauma volume experienced by general surgery residents in Canada to inform future teaching practices in the context of competency-based medical education. ER -