Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages

Many pathology departments are introducing subspecialty sign-out in surgical pathology. In 2014, the University of Vermont Medical Center transitioned from general sign-out to partial subspecialty sign-out to include gastrointestinal and breast/cervix subspecialty benches; other specimens remained o...

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Main Authors: Joanna L. Conant MD, Pamela C. Gibson MD, Janice Bunn PhD, Abiy B. Ambaye MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-07-01
Series:Academic Pathology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289517714767
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spelling doaj-a5c9088ac5a74fe2a804d2573741f5462020-11-25T03:16:51ZengSAGE PublishingAcademic Pathology2374-28952017-07-01410.1177/2374289517714767Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its AdvantagesJoanna L. Conant MD0Pamela C. Gibson MD1Janice Bunn PhD2Abiy B. Ambaye MD3 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USA Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USA Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USA Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USAMany pathology departments are introducing subspecialty sign-out in surgical pathology. In 2014, the University of Vermont Medical Center transitioned from general sign-out to partial subspecialty sign-out to include gastrointestinal and breast/cervix subspecialty benches; other specimens remained on general benches. Our experiences with the transition are described, including attending pathologist, trainee, support staff, and clinician satisfaction. A survey was e-mailed to all University of Vermont Medical Center anatomic pathology attendings, pathology trainees, pathologist assistants and grossing technicians, and clinicians who send surgical pathology specimens, immediately before and 1 year after transitioning to partial subspecialty sign-out. Quality assurance metrics were obtained for the 18 months prior to and following the transition. Gastrointestinal and breast/cervix attendings were more satisfied with partial subspecialty sign-out compared to those on the general benches. Overall, trainees were more satisfied with general sign-out because of the rotation schedule but preferred partial subspecialty sign-out due to improved teaching and more focused learning while on subspecialty benches. Clinicians remained very satisfied with our department and our reports; no differences were observed. Turnaround time was unchanged. After switching to partial subspecialty sign-out, there were significantly fewer discrepancies following multidisciplinary conference review for gastrointestinal and breast/cervix cases but remained the same for general cases. Fewer formal internal consults were performed after transitioning to partial subspecialty sign-out across all areas, but more notable for gastrointestinal and breast/cervix cases. Our data show improved quality assurance metrics and trainee education in a subspecialty sign-out setting compared to general sign-out setting.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289517714767
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joanna L. Conant MD
Pamela C. Gibson MD
Janice Bunn PhD
Abiy B. Ambaye MD
spellingShingle Joanna L. Conant MD
Pamela C. Gibson MD
Janice Bunn PhD
Abiy B. Ambaye MD
Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
Academic Pathology
author_facet Joanna L. Conant MD
Pamela C. Gibson MD
Janice Bunn PhD
Abiy B. Ambaye MD
author_sort Joanna L. Conant MD
title Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
title_short Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
title_full Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
title_fullStr Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
title_full_unstemmed Transition to Subspecialty Sign-Out at an Academic Institution and Its Advantages
title_sort transition to subspecialty sign-out at an academic institution and its advantages
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Academic Pathology
issn 2374-2895
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Many pathology departments are introducing subspecialty sign-out in surgical pathology. In 2014, the University of Vermont Medical Center transitioned from general sign-out to partial subspecialty sign-out to include gastrointestinal and breast/cervix subspecialty benches; other specimens remained on general benches. Our experiences with the transition are described, including attending pathologist, trainee, support staff, and clinician satisfaction. A survey was e-mailed to all University of Vermont Medical Center anatomic pathology attendings, pathology trainees, pathologist assistants and grossing technicians, and clinicians who send surgical pathology specimens, immediately before and 1 year after transitioning to partial subspecialty sign-out. Quality assurance metrics were obtained for the 18 months prior to and following the transition. Gastrointestinal and breast/cervix attendings were more satisfied with partial subspecialty sign-out compared to those on the general benches. Overall, trainees were more satisfied with general sign-out because of the rotation schedule but preferred partial subspecialty sign-out due to improved teaching and more focused learning while on subspecialty benches. Clinicians remained very satisfied with our department and our reports; no differences were observed. Turnaround time was unchanged. After switching to partial subspecialty sign-out, there were significantly fewer discrepancies following multidisciplinary conference review for gastrointestinal and breast/cervix cases but remained the same for general cases. Fewer formal internal consults were performed after transitioning to partial subspecialty sign-out across all areas, but more notable for gastrointestinal and breast/cervix cases. Our data show improved quality assurance metrics and trainee education in a subspecialty sign-out setting compared to general sign-out setting.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374289517714767
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