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Dive into the research topics where Mark S. Hochberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark S. Hochberg.


American Journal of Surgery | 2010

Can professionalism be taught? Encouraging evidence

Mark S. Hochberg; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; Elizabeth Kachur; Colleen Gillespie; Russell S. Berman

BACKGROUND Teaching and assessing the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) competencies of Professionalism and Communication have proven to be a challenge for surgical residency training programs. This study used innovative pedagogic approaches and tools in teaching these two competencies. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the learners actually are assimilating and using the concepts and values communicated through this curriculum. METHODS A six-station Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) was designed using standardized patients to create varying Professionalism and Communication scenarios. The surgical resident learners were evaluated using these OSCEs as a baseline. The faculty then facilitated a specially designed curriculum consisting of six interactive sessions focusing on information gathering, rapport building, patient education, delivering bad news, responding to emotion, and interdisciplinary respect. At the conclusion of this curriculum, the surgical resident learners took the same six-station OSCE to determine if their professionalism and communication skills had improved. RESULTS The surgical resident learners were rated by the standardized patients according to a strict task checklist of criteria at both the precurricular and postcurricular OSCEs. Improvement in the competencies of Professionalism and Communication did achieve statistical significance (P = .029 and P = .011, respectively). CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that the Communication and Professionalism ACGME competencies can be taught to surgical resident learners through a carefully crafted curriculum. Furthermore, these newly learned competencies can affect surgical resident interactions with their patients positively.


American Journal of Surgery | 2008

The timing of surgery for cholecystitis: a review of 202 consecutive patients at a large municipal hospital

Ann Y. Lee; Joseph J. Carter; Mark S. Hochberg; Alex M. Stone; Stuart L. Cohen; H. Leon Pachter

BACKGROUND Traditionally, cholecystectomy for cholecystitis is performed within 3 days of the onset of symptoms or after 5 weeks, allowing for resolution of the inflammatory response. This study reviewed the outcomes of cholecystectomy performed for patients with gallstone disease in the acute (n = 45), intermediate (n = 55), and delayed (n = 102) periods after the onset of symptoms. METHODS The medical records of 202 patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy at a large municipal hospital were reviewed retrospectively. The primary outcomes studied were length of hospital stay, conversion to open cholecystectomy, and complications. RESULTS There was no significant difference in the conversion rate (acute [18%] vs intermediate [20%] vs delayed [11%]) or complication rate (acute [16%] vs intermediate [9%] vs delayed [7%]) among the 3 groups. The delayed group had a significantly shorter length of hospital stay than the intermediate or acute group (3.1 +/- 3.8 vs 4.3 +/- 3.8 vs 1.7 +/- 2.1, respectively, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS Patients who present with acute symptoms of cholecystitis should undergo surgery during the same admission, regardless of the duration of symptoms.


American Journal of Surgery | 2013

The stress of residency: recognizing the signs of depression and suicide in you and your fellow residents

Mark S. Hochberg; Russell S. Berman; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; Colleen Gillespie; H. Leon Pachter

BACKGROUND Stress, depression, and suicide are universal but frequently unrecognized issues for women and men in residency training. Stress affects cognitive and psychomotor performance both inside and outside of the operating room. Stress impairs the 2 key components of a surgeons responsibilities: intellectual judgment and technical skill. We hypothesized that the recognition of depression, substance abuse, failing personal relationships, and potential suicide is poor among surgeons. If residents can recognize the signs of stress, depression, and suicide among colleagues, we believe it will not only improve their quality of life but also may preserve it. METHODS We first determined baseline resident knowledge of the signs of surgical stress including fatigue; burn out; depression; physician suicide; drug and alcohol abuse; and their effects on family, friends, and relationships. We then developed a curriculum to identify these signs in first, second, third, and fourth year surgical residents were identified as the target learners. The major topics discussed were depression; physician suicide; drug and alcohol abuse; and the effects of stress on family, friends, and our goals. Secondary objectives included identifying major sources of stress, general self-awareness, understanding professional choices, and creating a framework to manage stress. Residents participated in an interactive seminar with a surgical facilitator. Before and after the seminar, a multiple-choice test was administered with questions to assess knowledge of the signs of stress (eg, fatigue, burn out, and depression). RESULTS Twenty-one residents participated in this study. Seventeen completed the pretest, and 21 participated in the interactive seminar and completed the post-test. The pretest revealed that surgical residents were correct in 46.8% (standard deviation [SD] = 25.4%) of their responses. The postseminar test showed an improvement to 89.7% (SD = 6.1%, P < .001, paired Student t test = 5.37). The same test administered 4 months later to 17 of the 21 learners revealed 76.9% (SD = 18.7%) correct answers, suggesting that the information had been internalized. Cronbach α was calculated to be .67 for the pretest and .76 for the post-test, suggesting a moderate to high degree of internal consistency. CONCLUSIONS Stress is a significant and regularly overlooked component of a surgeons life. Because its effects often go unrecognized, stress frequently remains unresolved. To prevent its associated consequences such as depression, substance abuse, divorce, and suicide, educating house staff about stress is crucial. This study suggests that the symptoms, causes, and treatment of stress among surgeons can be taught effectively to surgical resident learners.


Annals of Surgery | 2016

Professionalism Training For Surgical Residents: Documenting the Advantages of a Professionalism Curriculum

Mark S. Hochberg; Russell S. Berman; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; Colleen Gillespie; Pachter Hl

Objectives: Professionalism education is a vital component of surgical training. This research attempts to determine whether an annual, year-long professionalism curriculum in a large surgical residency can effectively change professionalism attitudes. Summary of Background Data: The ACGME mandated 6 competencies in 2003. The competencies of Professionalism and Interpersonal/Professional Communication Skills had never been formally addressed in surgical resident education in the past. Methods: A professionalism curriculum was developed focusing on specific resident professionalism challenges: admitting mistakes, effective communication with colleagues at all levels, delivering the news of an unexpected death, interdisciplinary challenges of working as a team, the cultural challenge of obtaining informed consent through an interpreter, and the stress of surgical practice on you and your family. These professionalism skills were then evaluated with a 6-station Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE). Identical OSCE scenarios were administered to 2 cohorts of surgical residents: in 2007 (before instituting the professionalism curriculum in 2008) and again in 2014. Surgical residents were rated by trained Standardized Patients according to a behaviorally anchored professionalism criteria checklist. Results: An analysis of variance was conducted of overall OSCE professionalism scores (% well done) as the dependent variable for the 2 resident cohorts (2007 vs 2014). The 2007 residents received a mean score of 38% of professionalism items “well done” (SD 9%) and the 2014 residents received a mean 59% “well done” (SD 8%). This difference is significant (F = 49.01, P < .001). Conclusions: Professionalism education has improved surgical resident understanding, awareness, and practice of professionalism in a statistically significant manner from 2007 to 2014. This documented improvement in OSCE performance reflects the value of a professionalism curriculum in the care of the patients we seek to serve.


American Journal of Surgery | 2014

Cutting too deep? Assessing the impact of a shorter surgery clerkship on students' clinical skills and knowledge.

Navin D. Bhatia; Colleen Gillespie; Alexandra J. Berger; Mark S. Hochberg; Jennifer B. Ogilvie

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to compare the performance of students completing an 8-week versus a 6-week surgery clerkship on an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) and the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) clinical science surgery examination. METHODS One hundred fifteen students from the 8-week clerkship and 99 from the 6-week clerkship were included. Performance on a summative OSCE was assessed using behaviorally anchored checklists. NBME exams were graded using the NBMEs standard scaled scores. Results were compared using 2-tailed, independent-samples, unequal-variance t tests. RESULTS Mean OSCE scores for the 8-week and 6-week curricula were not statistically different. Mean NBME scores also did not statistically differ. Six-week students performed significantly better in the specific OSCE subdomains of blood pressure, orthostatic blood pressure, rectal exam, and fecal occult blood test. CONCLUSIONS Overall OSCE and NBME exam performance did not differ between 8-week and 6-week surgery clerkship students.


American Journal of Surgery | 2012

The professionalism curriculum as a cultural change agent in surgical residency education

Mark S. Hochberg; Russell S. Berman; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; Colleen Gillespie; H. Leon Pachter


Academic Medicine | 2011

Perspective: Malpractice in an academic medical center: a frequently overlooked aspect of professionalism education.

Mark S. Hochberg; Carolyn D. Seib; Russell S. Berman; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; H. Leon Pachter


American Journal of Surgery | 2014

When surgeons decide to become surgeons: new opportunities for surgical education

Mark S. Hochberg; Jessica Billig; Russell S. Berman; Adina Kalet; Sondra Zabar; Jaclyn R. Fox; H. Leon Pachter


American Journal of Surgery | 2017

Midclerkship feedback in the surgical clerkship: the “Professionalism, Reporting, Interpreting, Managing, Educating, and Procedural Skills” application utilizing learner self-assessment

Mark S. Hochberg; Russell S. Berman; Jennifer B. Ogilvie; Sandra Yingling; Sabrina Lee; Martin Pusic; H. Leon Pachter


American Journal of Surgery | 2017

Surgical clerkship or medical clerkship first: Does it make a difference?

Andrew Adelsheimer; Russell S. Berman; H. Leon Pachter; Mark S. Hochberg

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