Surgical vocation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15381/anales.v76i4.11404Keywords:
Surgery, Education, Vocation.Abstract
Objective. To describe and delimit the surgical vocation process and associated factors. Design. Selected cases cross-sectional study qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed with descriptive purpose. Methods. Previous informed consent in depth audio-recorded interviews was carried out in 40 surgeons in current professional practice. Main outcome measures. Surgical vocation. Results. Males represented 95%; mean age was 65 years (41-86), mean medical experience 35.4 years (10-68), surgical experience 30.2 years (03-59). Training centers: 85% had university surgical training and 15% non-university training. Surgical vocation is a process that can begin in different periods of the life`s cycle. When it does before university studies (17.5% of the studied sample) it is mainly associated to strong family influence (parents or uncles surgeons). More frequently (80%) it emerges during medical undergraduate studies, under the influence of diverse formative stimuli provided by the medical school and/or paradigmatic professors. In one case (2.5%) surgical vocation had emerged at an early age whose origin the interviewed could not explain. Conclusions. Surgical vocation is based on solid service vocation. The surgeon with substantive vocation experiences real pleasure in doing surgical activities being oriented to a comprehensive and ethical management of patient and family. Finally, new research hypothesis produced by this study in this area are discussed and recommendations are given for professional teaching of surgery including Ethics as a basic need in surgeon´s training.Downloads
Published
2015-12-31
Issue
Section
Artículo Original
License
Copyright (c) 2015 Alberto Perales Cabrera, Alfonso Mendoza Fernández, Elard Sánchez Tejada, Eric Bravo Basaldúa, Lorenzo Barahona Meza, William Aguilar Rivera, Elizabeth Varela Roberto, Verónica Chumpitaz Alvarez
![Creative Commons License](http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-sa/4.0/88x31.png)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Those authors who have publications with this magazine accept the following terms:
- Authors will retain their copyrights and guarantee the journal the right of first publication of their work, which will be simultaneously subject to Creative Commons Attribution License that allows third parties to share the work as long as its author and its first publication this magazine are indicated.
- Authors may adopt other non-exclusive licensing agreements for the distribution of the version of the published work (eg, deposit it in an institutional electronic file or publish it in a monographic volume) provided that the initial publication in this magazine is indicated.
- Authors are allowed and recommended to disseminate their work over the Internet (eg: in institutional telematic archives or on their website) before and during the submission process, which It can produce interesting exchanges and increase quotes from the published work. (See El efecto del acceso abierto ).
How to Cite
1.
Perales Cabrera A, Mendoza Fernández A, Sánchez Tejada E, Bravo Basaldúa E, Barahona Meza L, Aguilar Rivera W, et al. Surgical vocation. An Fac med [Internet]. 2015 Dec. 31 [cited 2024 Jul. 7];76(4):349-5. Available from: https://revistasinvestigacion.unmsm.edu.pe/index.php/anales/article/view/11404