Abstract

Educational institutions should be aware of the frequency of surgical procedures in private practice, to assist both the student and the lecturer in evaluating the relative importance of procedures and to structure training programmes accordingly. The surgical caseload for 1 year at a veterinary academic hospital and 13 private companion animal hospitals registered with the South African Veterinary Council were compared. Surgical records were entered into a spreadsheet and sorted according to 96 selected surgical procedures to facilitate comparisons. Surgical procedures were in turn grouped according to date, species, degree of difficulty and frequency of occurrence. Feline procedures were more commonly performed in private hospitals. The academic hospital's caseload was dominated by major and advanced procedures while the private hospitals carried out more minor procedures. At the private hospitals more general surgery, and ear, nose and throat surgery as well as dental procedures were performed, while at the academic hospital more ophthalmic, orthopaedic, thoracic and neurosurgical procedures were carried out. The most commonly performed procedures at the academic hospital differed from those at the private hospitals. No seasonal trends were evident.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study was to compare the frequency of surgical procedures in private practice with that of an academic hospital, and to develop guidelines regarding what veterinary students who intend moving into private practice ‘need to know’, vis-à-vis information that is ‘nice to know’

  • From archived files in the Section of Small Animal Surgery, Department of Surgery, Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital (OVAH ), Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, and, second, from Vet-OM (Veterinary Office Manager, Johannesburg) files of 13 private hospitals registered with the South African Veterinary Council

  • All the procedures that were performed more than once a month in private hospitals appeared in the OVAH procedure list, albeit at different frequencies except for abscess management, tail docking and coeliotomies

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this study was to compare the frequency of surgical procedures in private practice with that of an academic hospital, and to develop guidelines regarding what veterinary students who intend moving into private practice ‘need to know’, vis-à-vis information that is ‘nice to know’. Such information may be of use in the structuring of surgical courses, and should ideally be obtained from members of the veterinary profession who are in private practice.[5] It is interesting to note that graduating veterinary students at the University of Illinois[3] accurately predicted the surgical procedures that they would be performing regularly in private practice.

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