Characteristics of Surgical Coaching Interventions: A Systematic Review

Benjamin Julien*, Douglas Greer, Nicholas Bull, Boris Zevin, Christine O'Neill, Conor Gilligan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:
Coaching is increasingly utilized as an educational intervention for performance improvement in surgeons and surgical trainees. Surgical coaching has been utilized across a broad range of specialties, experience levels and outcomes with generally positive results. Coaching interventions are often developed by individual institutions for their own context which has resulted in a heterogenous group of interventions. This review aims to investigate surgical coaching interventions to identify common characteristics that comprise an effective coaching intervention.

METHODS:
A systematic review was conducted to identify studies investigating surgical coaching interventions up to July 2024. Studies were limited to English language peer-reviewed studies that adequately described the characteristics and outcomes of the surgical coaching intervention. Data on the primary and secondary outcomes, study objective and participants’ demographics were also recorded.

RESULTS:
The search across 4 electronic databases generated 9538 citations. Following screening and review of full text articles 28 studies were included in the review. Surgical coaching interventions were carried out in 8 separate countries with the majority (22/28) in North America. Studies involved between 3 and 107 participants. Coaching interventions were markedly heterogenous, and specific details of the methods used were inconsistently documented. Study length ranged from 1 (9/28) to 14 (1/28) sessions and duration from less than 15 minutes (1/29) to greater than 3 hours (3/28). The most common themes were goal setting (10/28), feedback (7/28) and reflection (7/28). Outcomes were generally positive with 47 of 55 identified outcomes demonstrating benefit from surgical coaching. There were 3 key domains and 13 sub-domains that comprised the majority of coaching interventions.

CONCLUSIONS:
Surgical coaching has been shown to be a promising intervention that requires more rigorous research to develop the field. We have identified 3 key domains which can be utilized to analyses and develop coaching interventions in the future.
Original languageEnglish
Article number 103543
Pages (from-to)1-12
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Surgical Education
Volume82
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2025

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