Journal article

Surgical approach to hysterectomy and barriers to using minimally invasive methods

Monika Janda, Nigel R Armfield, Gayle Kerr, Suzanne Kurz, Graeme Jackson, Jason Currie, Katie Page, Edward Weaver, Anusch Yazdani, Andreas Obermair

AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNAECOLOGY | WILEY | Published : 2018

Abstract

Minimally invasive approaches to hysterectomy have been shown to be safe, effective and have recovery advantages over open hysterectomy, yet in Australia 36% of hysterectomies are still conducted by open surgery. In 2006, a survey of Australian gynaecological specialists found the main impediment to increasing laparoscopic hysterectomy to be a lack of surgical skills training opportunities. We resurveyed specialists to explore contemporary factors influencing surgeons' approaches to hysterectomy; 258 (estimated ~19%) provided analysable responses. Despite >50% of surveyed specialists wishing to practise laparoscopic hysterectomy in the future, lack of surgical skills, arising from the lack o..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI)


Funding Acknowledgements

The study received (competitive, externally peer-reviewed) funding from the Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI, grant SG0015-000486). The funder played no part in the conduct of the research, or in writing of the paper.