Abstract

Athletic team coverage experience varies widely across orthopedic surgery residency programs in the United States. There is a paucity of literature regarding whether serving as a team physician contributes to resident education and whether it can be performed within the bounds of current work-hour restrictions. Residents consider coverage of high school football games a valuable educational experience that does not adversely affect their 80-hour work week. Sixty-one orthopedic residents who served as high school football team physicians as part of their residency curriculum completed an 11-question survey. Responses ranged from strongly agree (1) to strongly disagree (5) on a Likert scale. The majority of residents agreed that serving as a team physician was an overall valuable experience (85%), that it enhanced their orthopedic sports medicine education (89%), and that it increased their awareness of the role played by athletic trainers (97%). The majority of respondents disagreed only with the statement that serving as a team physician had negatively affected their 80-hour work week (54%), and an additional 26% neither agreed nor disagreed. The vast majority of participating orthopedic residents consider high school football team coverage a valuable experience that enhances education and can be performed within work-hour limitations. [Orthopedics. 2020;43(6):e574-e578.].

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