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Survey of the Initial Cohort of Graduating Integrated 0+5 Residents and Vascular Fellows: Experiences During the Job Hunt
The first two integrated vascular residents in the United States graduated in 2012, and in 2013 eleven more will enter the job market. The purpose of this study was to compare the job search experiences of the first cohort of 0+5 graduates to their counterparts completing 5+2 fellowship programs.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - July 27, 2013 Category: Surgery Authors: Benjamin D. Colvard, Murray Shames, Andres Schanzer, John Rectenwald, Rabih Chaer, Jason T. Lee Tags: Abstracts from the 2013 Western Vascular Society Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Recent trends in publications of US vascular surgery program directors.
Conclusion There seems to be a significant decline in the number of publications over the last 15 years. Yet, the subject of the publications has progressed from Open to TEVAR with an increase in endovascular publications. However, basic science publications reduced by half. PMID: 29130399 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Vascular - January 1, 2017 Category: Surgery Authors: Aurshina A, Hingorani A, Hingorani A, Zainab A, Marks N, Blumberg S, Ascher E Tags: Vascular Source Type: research

Canadian vascular surgery residents' perceptions regarding future job opportunities.
The objective was to determine the employment environment for graduates of Canadian vascular surgery training programs. A cross-sectional survey of residents and graduates (2011-2012) was used. Thirty-seven residents were invited with a response rate of 57%, and 14 graduates with a response rate of 71%; 70% of graduates felt the job market played an important role in their decision to pursue vascular surgery as a career compared to 43% of trainees. The top three concerns were the lack of surgeons retiring, the overproduction of trainees, and saturation of the job market. The majority (62%) of trainees see themselves extend...
Source: Vascular - June 25, 2014 Category: Surgery Authors: Cooper JA, Dubois L, Power AH, DeRose G, MacKenzie KS, Forbes TL Tags: Vascular Source Type: research

Early Returns: Operative Logs for Traditional Vascular Fellowship Track Versus Integrated Vascular Training Programs
In this study we assessed the initial operative experience of those graduating from the new “0-5” integrated programs compared with those from the traditional “5-2” model.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - August 22, 2014 Category: Surgery Authors: Philip Batista, Babak Abai, Dawn Salvatore, Paul DiMuzio Tags: Abstracts from the 2014 New England Society for Vascular Surgery/Eastern Vascular Society Joint Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Vascular Surgery Manpower in Canada – Will I Have a Job?
This study evaluated the predicted vascular surgery manpower requirement across Canada to 2021.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - October 23, 2015 Category: Surgery Authors: Shamim Lotfi, William Petrcih, Prasad Jetty, Timothy Brandys Tags: Abstract from the 2015 Canadian Society for Vascular Surgery Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Evaluating the Venous Experience in Vascular Surgery Training
The objective of this study was to examine the current venous surgical training experience of graduating VS trainees.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - August 23, 2016 Category: Surgery Authors: Michael Siah, Steven Abramowitz, Edward Woo, Paul Haser, John Ricotta, Robyn Macsata Tags: Abstract from the 2016 Eastern Vascular Society Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Comparison of Vascular Operative Experience Between Traditional Vascular Fellowship and Vascular Integrated Residency Graduates
This study compared the operative experience between graduates of these two training pathways.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - July 20, 2017 Category: Surgery Authors: John G. Maijub, Senthil N. Jayarajan, Jeffrey Jim Tags: Abstract from the 2017 Midwestern Vascular Surgical Society Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Comparison of Vascular Surgery Operative Exposure for 0 + 5 Versus 5 + 2 Training Paradigms
The 0 + 5 vascular surgery training paradigm introduced in 2007 offered a unique training pathway for aspiring vascular surgeons. It is unclear whether this pathway provides more robust operative exposure to vascular surgery trainees than does the traditional 5 + 2 track. There remains limited information available on the current trends in case numbers of graduating residents to date. Our study seeks to compare the vascular surgery operative exposure for 0 + 5 vs 5 + 2 training paradigms.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - August 21, 2019 Category: Surgery Authors: Kristin Schafer, Eric Goldschmidt, Heitham Albeshri, Munier Nazzal, Mohamed Osman Tags: Abstract from the 2019 Midwestern Vascular Surgical Society Annual Meeting Source Type: research

Contemporary Analysis of Senior Level Case Volume Variation Between Traditional Vascular Surgery Fellows and Integrated Vascular Surgery Chief Residents
A review was performed of Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education integrated vascular surgery, vascular surgery fellowship, and general surgery case logs for trainees graduating between 2013 and 2018.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - October 21, 2020 Category: Surgery Authors: S.D. Talutis, S.W. de Geus, A. Farber Tags: Vascular vantage point Source Type: research

Comparison of Patient Outcomes Among Integrated Residency Versus Fellowship-Trained Vascular Surgeons.
A retrospective review of the American Board of Surgeons database from 2013 to 2017, which was linked to the Vascular Quality Initiative registry from 2013 to 2019.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - March 22, 2021 Category: Surgery Authors: B.K. Smith, S.R.G. Finlayson, B.A. Perler, A.P. Presson, C.M. Allen, B.S. Brooke Tags: Surgical outcomes in practice are the same for vascular surgeons who graduated from vascular residencies as vascular fellowships Source Type: research

Integrated Residency Is Associated With an Increase in Women Among Vascular Surgery Trainees
During the past decade, the proportion of women within graduate medical education (GME) has increased. Correspondingly, the proportion of women in almost every specialty has increased, including surgical specialties. We sought to evaluate the effect of establishing vascular surgery integrated residencies (VSIRs) on the proportion of women in vascular surgery (VS) training programs.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - August 22, 2018 Category: Surgery Authors: Susanna Shin, Sherene Shalhub Tags: Abstract from the 2018 Western Vascular Society Annual Meeting Source Type: research

The Vascular Surgical Milestones Project
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has outlined its Next Accreditation System (NAS) that will focus on individual resident and residency outcome measurements.1-3 Vascular surgery (VS) has implemented the NAS beginning July 2014 with first reporting in January 2015. A key component of the NAS is the objective and constructive assessment of educational milestones, which are explicit behaviors or accomplishments that occur during the process of residency education.2 Milestones describe competencies more specifically and identify specialty-specific knowledge, skills, attitudes, and performance tha...
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - May 3, 2015 Category: Surgery Authors: Erica L. Mitchell, John F. Eidt, Robert S. Rhodes, R. James Valentine, Vascular Surgery Milestone Working Group Source Type: research

A Comparison of Training Experience, Training Satisfaction, and Job Search Experiences Between Integrated Vascular Surgery Residency and Traditional Vascular Surgery Fellowship Graduates
The first two integrated vascular residents in the United States graduated in 2012, and in 2013 eleven more entered the job market. The purpose of this study was to compare the job search experiences of the first cohort of integrated 0+5 graduates to their counterparts completing traditional 5+2 fellowship programs.
Source: Annals of Vascular Surgery - June 29, 2015 Category: Surgery Authors: Benjamin Colvard, Murray Shames, Andres Schanzer, John Rectenwald, Rabih Chaer, Jason T. Lee Source Type: research

IP169. Vascular Surgery Trainees Should Have Formal Career Planning
Most graduating vascular surgery trainees are well trained in the art of taking care of patients with vascular disease. However, these trainees are often inexperienced in navigating the initial job search. We sought to define the depth of the deficiency in trainees ’ preparation for graduating and finding a professional position.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - May 22, 2018 Category: Surgery Authors: Susanna H. Shin, Niten Singh Source Type: research

A Single-institution Experience: The Integrated Vascular Surgery Residency’s Effect on Fellowship and General Surgery Resident Case Volume and Diversity
Conclusions: At our institution, the introduction of a 0 + 5 vascular residency has correlated with a modest drop (15%) in overall case volume for the 5 + 2 fellows, but the number of primary cases have actually increased slightly and they continue to meet or exceed Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education requirements and national 50th percentile rates. General surgery residents’ vascular volumes, by contrast, have remained stable, and interest in vascular surgery by residents has increased. Our integrated vascular residents are projected to exceed the fellows’ 50th percentile case volume and diversity tar...
Source: Annals of Vascular Surgery - October 23, 2013 Category: Surgery Authors: Megan I. Carroll, Kathryne Downes, Branko Miladinovic, Karl A. Illig, Paul A. Armstrong, Martin R. Back, Brad L. Johnson, Murray L. Shames Tags: Clinical Research Source Type: research