Dr. Natalie Calcatera (site director) – Cell: 937-371-1829 Email: Natalie.calcatera@mainehealth.org
Dr. Robert Doiron (second contact)
Dr. David Grubb
Dr. Blair Baldwin
Contact Dr. Calcatera before the rotation by phone or email to discuss the schedule and answer any questions.
Know the steps and anatomy of the surgeries listed below and any other scheduled cases
Stepwise progression through the surgical cases
Manage elective patients from pre-op to discharge, and inpatient consults from admission to discharge
Evaluate general surgery patients in clinic, including performing a history and physical exam, formulate a plan for workup or surgery, proper documentation, and coding of the visit.
You should round in the mornings before cases. You should see the patients you have operated on and seen in consultation. Check in with APPs for the day – one APP will be assigned to each patient as a backup.
Be on time for cases. Read about the patient and review any relevant labs or imaging ahead of time. If you have questions, you can reach out to the surgeon the day before. Confirm that the H&P and consent are done on the day of surgery, and you should roll into the room with the patient. Enter post-operative admission or discharge orders. Expect to debrief the case with the surgeon.
Each week you will be assigned to one of the general surgeons. You will follow their daily schedule – clinic, call, OR. If your assigned surgeon is out, you will be given a new assignment for the day.
General surgery clinic is located at 9 Healthcare Drive, Ste. 204, Biddeford.
Bariatric clinic is located at 72 Main St., Kennebunk
Your time should be accounted for throughout the week and any absences should be preapproved or scheduled, except for Tuesday and Thursday morning conference. You are not expected to round in Biddeford before your conference.
Attending call schedules can be found on Amion, but will also be given to you at the beginning of the rotation.
When your assigned surgeon is on call Monday – Thursday, you will be first call for floor pages from 5p-7a from home. This is typically low volume and could be 0, 1, or 2 nights (max). The attending is immediately available by phone as backup, and you are not expected to drive in to triage a sick patient. The attending is first call for the ED and new inpatient consults. Your attending will notify you of any emergent operative cases to be performed overnight. Your attendance to assist an emergency case is requested but not mandatory if you have other obligations (conference the next morning, etc).
Autonomy is dictated by experience and progression. The more present you are in the OR, the more you will get to do. As you show competency and knowledge of the flow of the case, you will be able to do more.
It is helpful to have a specific objective for each case.
Have a learning plan and discuss this with the operating surgeon BEFORE the case, and ideally at the start of the rotation.
Sleeve
Access/Port placement
Greater curve dissection
Intra operative endoscopy
Stapling
Specimen removal and closure
Gastric Bypass
Port placement
Identification of ligament of Treitz and running small bowel
Laparoscopic suturing/pexy of small bowel
Creation of JJ
Mesenteric closure
Omental splitting
Peri gastric dissection
Pouch creation
GJ anastomosis
Intra operative endoscopy
Closing
Hiatal hernia repair
Setting up the case: Entry/port placement/liver retractor
Intraop endoscopy
Hiatal dissection: if you can assist with the dissection with minimal direction, you will get more autonomy to do the dissection.
Hiatal closure: laparoscopic sewing and tying (Beware the aorta and IVC)
Sac dissection
Fundoplication
Setting up the case: Entry/port placement/liver retractor
Intraop endoscopy
Hiatal dissection
Greater curvature dissection
Hiatal closure
Wrap placement/creation
Laparoscopic inguinal hernias
Camera management
Flap creation
Anatomic dissection
Mesh placement
Flap closure
Open ventral hernias
Entry
Lysis of adhesions
Retro-rectus dissection
Possible component separation
Closure and mesh placement
Robotic ventral/inguinal hernias
Lysis of adhesions
Flap creation
Dissection
Mesh placement
Flap closure
Thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy
Anatomy
Exposure
Identification of the RLN and parathyroid glands
Safe dissection
Laparoscopic or robotic cholecystectomy
Safe entry into the abdomen
Port placement
Retraction of the gallbladder and exposure
Safe dissection and obtaining the critical view
Appropriate ligation
Extraction and closure
Cholangiogram
Other common cases: partial colectomy, colostomy creation, appendectomy, pilonidal cyst excision, hemorrhoidectomy.