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News / Health / Health Wire

Doctors favor more testing for neurosurgeons after age 65

By Mayo Clinic News Network
Published: November 20, 2017, 6:05am

ROCHESTER, Minn. — People sometimes joke that easy tasks are “not brain surgery.” But what happens when it actually is brain surgery? How old is too old to be a neurosurgeon? In a new Mayo Clinic Proceedings study, most neurosurgeons disagreed with an absolute age cutoff, but half favored additional testing for neurosurgeons 65 and older.

“With an aging physician workforce nationwide, this study’s intriguing responses deserve reflection by the neurosurgical community,” says senior author Fredric Meyer, M.D., executive dean of education, Mayo Clinic, who is executive director of the American Board of Neurological Surgery. Dr. Meyer is the Juanita Kious Waugh Executive Dean of Education and the Alfred Uihlein Family Professor of Neurologic Surgery.

“It’s important to focus on patient safety and also assess a neurosurgeon’s capacity over time,” Dr. Meyer says. “In the future, surgical simulator training and testing may become essential in continuing assessment of a surgeon’s technical and cognitive competency.”

Training to become a neurosurgeon is a lengthy process — typically four years of medical school, seven years in neurosurgical residency and frequently an additional year of post-residency fellowship. Neurosurgeons may perform surgery on the brain, spine or any part of the central nervous system.

Of 4,899 neurosurgeons surveyed, 1,449 (30 percent) responded to an anonymous and confidential questionnaire. Most respondents, 938 (65 percent), were 50 and older.

Asked how to evaluate aging neurosurgeons, respondents said:

  • There should be no absolute age cutoff, 956 (66 percent).
  • Neurosurgeons 65 and older should undergo additional testing, including cognitive assessment or a review of cases, in addition to a standard Maintenance of Certification exam, 718 (50 percent).
  • A Maintenance of Certification exam should include individual case log and patient outcome review, 766 (59 percent).
  • A Maintenance of Certification exam should be tailored to accommodate the aging neurosurgeon, 606 (42 percent).

Because more than one-third of U.S. surgeons are older than 55, the issues raised in the study will be important to other surgical disciplines, notes Kerry Olsen, M.D., a Mayo Clinic otorhinolaryngologist, in an accompanying editorial. “Deciding when to end one’s surgical practice can be an extremely difficult decision,” says Dr. Olsen, who no longer performs surgery.

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