General surgery, the general surgical subspecialties, and prerequisite training
E. A. Luce
Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington.
Currently, several specialties (cardiothoracic, pediatric, and colorectal)
require a full general surgery residency before specialty training. Plastic
surgery has, in essence, a de facto requirement since most residents have
had at least 5 years of general surgery training before initiation of a
plastic surgery residency. Forces within both general surgery and plastic
surgery will dictate that such a de facto requirement will not persist in
the future. The pressures that compel plastic surgery to modify the
traditional role of general surgery as preparatory training for requisite
or specialty residency training can be extended by analogy to the other
specialties as well. This article will hypothesize that the premises and
the conclusions about the relationship between plastic surgery and general
surgery apply equally well to the other specialties. If the traditional and
historical role of full general surgery residency as prerequisite training
for a specialty residency is discarded, careful thought must be given to
any substitute system to graduate surgical education. In particular,
attention must be directed to the three components of clinical skills to be
acquired and to an expectation of operative or technical experience.