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Surgeons Face Unique Ergonomic Challenges

Matthew Fox, MSHC

September 1, 2022

Surgeons Face Unique Ergonomic Challenges

Highlights

  • Describes factors that contribute to increased prevalence of ergonomic injuries, especially among women surgeons
  • Explains how a lack of awareness has allowed ergonomic challenges to go largely unsolved
  • Discusses potential solutions and describes ACS Ergonomics Clinic offerings at Clinical Congress

In an era of growing awareness regarding the effects of healthcare professional well-being on quality of care, the government, hospital systems, and professional organizations, including the 糖心网页版, have been focusing more on physician health.聽

Many initiatives focus on the mental and emotional aspects of well-being, as they are underrecognized prerequisites to career success and positive patient outcomes.1,2 On top of that, surgery is a physically demanding field.聽

Within the occupational environment of the operating room (OR), avoiding ergonomic injuries that are an inherent risk to performing modern surgery is a necessity for a surgeon鈥檚 bodily health, job satisfaction, and career longevity. Research has suggested that as many as seven in 10 surgeons in all specialties experience musculoskeletal injuries or pain;3 within these statistics lay hidden difficulties for women surgeons.聽

Women surgeons face well-known barriers to career success, including the demands of their role in childbearing and starting a family and a lack of leadership representation, which have been part of the surgeon well-being conversation for some time.4,5 But the unique ergonomic issues women surgeons confront in their work have more recently been explored in research and perspective pieces. A 2022 study, for example, found that significantly more female than male surgeons report operation-related musculoskeletal injury, and narrative articles have featured women surgeons describing their experiences with pain and injury that they suggest is the result of unmet ergonomic needs.6,7

These developments are prompting a need to explore women surgeons鈥 ergonomic challenges, bring awareness to the problem, and create potential solutions.

Identifying the Issue

Like many challenges facing surgeons and surgery, the recent attention that women surgeons鈥 ergonomic injuries are receiving is born from a variety of firsthand experiences.

鈥淪ix years ago, I had musculoskeletal issues related to operating. I had severe jaw pain extending from my neck and shoulders,鈥 said Geeta Lal, MD, FACS, professor of surgery at the University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics in Iowa City. Her pain was neither idiopathic nor clinically ignorable; imaging and therapies clearly showed a problem. 鈥淓ventually, I was told that a big contributor for that was the forward head posture that I regularly found myself in when operating,鈥 Dr. Lal said.聽

Driven by her injuries, she performed research and found that most surgeons report pain after operating, and women tend to fare worse than their male counterparts. And for some surgeons, the pain and injury caused by ergonomic issues can be severe enough that they can end a career too early, which is what occurred for Talar Tejirian, MD, FACS, a retired general surgeon from Los Angeles, CA. Dr. Tejirian explained that she had radiculopathy from a herniated disc that required disc replacement surgery. 鈥淭he nerve injury causing the weakness was misdiagnosed for about 7 to 8 months,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was during the time of the misdiagnosis and incorrect rehab that I developed severe pain, and by the time it was diagnosed, the nerve injury was permanent.鈥澛

Though the reason for Dr. Tejirian鈥檚 initial injury was multifactorial, she said that ergonomics issues were a key part of the puzzle. Her experience is a stark example of how ergonomic injury can affect a surgeon, but also illustrates what is at stake both individually and collectively. In light of the growing surgeon workforce shortage, losing a surgeon in the prime of her career represents a massive loss of time and money, undoubtedly, but also the future chance to provide patients with quality outcomes.聽

Instrumentation

As previously noted, surgeons experience ergonomic pain and injuries regardless of gender. But why does evidence suggest that women disproportionately suffer? The answer is multifactorial, but the interplay of biological mechanics and design factors play a part.

鈥淚nherently, women have less muscle mass than men,鈥 Dr. Tejirian said. 鈥淎nd my ergonomics at a shorter height are very different than a taller, male surgeon. My use of surgical tools and OR equipment can be very different from the average man鈥檚,鈥 she said. This is an issue that can affect use of a range of devices, including laparoscopes, endoscopes, and open surgery tools like a stapler.

鈥淲hen I was training, I was told I would need to learn to close an incision by firing the stapler with one hand because I would need the other hand for something else,鈥 said Jaime Bohl, MD, FACS, chief of colon and rectal surgery at the Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) School of Medicine in Richmond. 鈥淏ut I physically do not have the strength to do that with a traditional stapler. I need both hands to use it,鈥 she said. This situation necessitates adapting her positioning and workflow within an operation, which Dr. Bohl says has contributed to her ongoing back pain.

Many surgical tools are not made for the hands of women, surgeons with a smaller than average stature, or individuals with less grip and arm strength in general. This part of the women鈥檚 ergonomics has been known for some time, according to Dr. Lal, who noted that the largely women-led procedural specialty of obstetrics/gynecology (OB/GYN) was among the first to notice the issues. 鈥淥B/GYN was an early adopter of laparoscopy compared to other specialties. Women gynecologists were the first to sound the alarm many years ago because they were having a lot of hand and wrist issues. The laparoscopic tools they were using, and which largely are still in use, were not being designed or tested for suitability for women鈥檚 hands,鈥 she said.

As Dr. Bohl said, 鈥淗aving the right tools is an absolute necessity. How can you not help a surgeon do their job to best of their ability?鈥

Workspace

The issue of ergonomics extends to the OR environment, including the integration of operating tables and other equipment into an average-sized woman surgeon鈥檚 work setting. 鈥淭he patient鈥檚 habitus changes for every operation, and tables often don鈥檛 lower far enough for shorter women to safely operate on patients,鈥 Dr. Tejirian said, noting that the increasing obesity and body size of the average patient can exacerbate the issue. 鈥淵ou can get step stools, but they might not be at the right level. One stool might not be enough, while two is too much,鈥 she said. The muscular compensation required in these circumstances is physically challenging and can cause ongoing positioning pain.

Working around these ergonomic issues requires gaining an intimate knowledge of equipment that isn鈥檛 necessary for an average-sized male surgeon. 鈥淎s a surgeon, you learn your equipment very well, but with these ergonomic issues as a woman, I learned to come into the room and make sure the right table is there before the patient comes, because it can make or break my ability to perform the operation,鈥 she said.

鈥淭he issue of equipment being available is twofold: one is the design at the company level, and the other is the optimization,鈥 Dr. Lal said. 鈥淲hen these tools are being tested, are they using a wide array of surgeons, or are they only using male surgeons with a standard size 8 glove? Surgeons, both female and male, who fall in the margins outside the standard size expected to use these instruments can end up feeling excluded.鈥

When I was in physical therapy, I was told, 鈥楢ll surgeons have problems in that area of the neck.

Talar Tejirian, MD, FACS

A Silent Problem and Lack of Awareness

Although it may seem obvious that a hospital or health system would want its surgeons to have a comfortable, sustainable working environment, women surgeons often hesitate to bring their concerns to leadership.

鈥淎s a woman, you don鈥檛 want to seem like a complainer,鈥 Dr. Tejirian said. 鈥淚f you repeatedly ask for a tool that makes only your job easier, you don鈥檛 want to be seen as 鈥榟igh maintenance.鈥 You feel like if you say to your team or administration, 鈥楩ind the laparoscopy inserts to make the case easier for me,鈥 that people would take notice, especially when you are the only woman surgeon in the department. So, you make do with what you have, especially early in your career.鈥

And those decisions made early in a career can have long-term consequences, according to Dr. Bohl. 鈥淎s a resident, you operate in the ergonomics settings of your senior attending, and if there鈥檚 a big size mismatch that affects your positioning, after 5 years of residency it can wear on you physically,鈥 she said. This situation can lead to small but repetitive injuries that a young surgeon may not notice immediately but that can add up over years and make a substantial difference in later pain or injury.

These concerns raise another issue for women surgeons. 鈥淲e ask ourselves, 鈥楧o we really belong?鈥欌 Dr. Lal said, suggesting that this is an extension of an issue with diversity, equity, and inclusion in the OR. 鈥淭he OR has traditionally not been an inclusive environment, and if we want to make it an inclusive environment, we absolutely need to look at instrument design. The tools are unfavorable to an entire population of surgeons who need to contort their hands or adapt to using the instruments, which puts them at a higher risk of injury,鈥 she said.

In many ways, ergonomic challenges arise from a lack of awareness that lacks visibility from the very start of surgical training.

鈥淲hen I was in physical therapy, I was told, 鈥楢ll surgeons have problems in that area of the neck,鈥欌 Dr. Tejirian said, and her therapist explained that she was turning her neck in a way it was not meant to turn for extended periods and putting considerable strain on the area when she retracted heavy body parts. But this was the first she had ever heard of any ergonomic concerns that would end up cutting her career short. 鈥淲hy had I never heard about this before? I was never told about it in training. Medical schools and hospitals were not training residents in ergonomics. We don鈥檛 focus on it. The surgeon鈥檚 health is always put as secondary, even if the answer is something as simple as properly repositioning tables and monitors in laparoscopic procedures,鈥 she said.

Indeed, the lack of focus on ergonomic issues for surgeons was the impetus for the creation of the Society for Surgical Ergonomics. Dr. Lal, the society鈥檚 current president and one of its founders, became aware of the need for education and information when she participated in a Twitter chat with the Association of Women Surgeons, during which she discussed the addition of surgical ergonomics to the resident training curriculum at her institution.聽

鈥淎fter that, I received a lot of messages saying, 鈥榃e鈥檙e all experiencing pain, but no one is talking about it,鈥 Dr. Lal said. She used Twitter to create an interest group, and the society was eventually created in 2021 when a group of surgeons, human factors experts, and other stakeholders came together.聽

As reflected in the predominantly female composition of the society鈥檚 leadership, women had a distinct interest in ergonomics, and Dr. Lal suggests many wellness programs and initiatives in surgery are often led by women because they are more apt to talk about well-being deficiencies.

Positioning for Solutions

The ergonomic challenges women surgeons face are becoming clear, and with attention now being paid to healthcare worker well-being on both the professional and larger public stages, the time is right for the field of surgery to find solutions. And in a comparable way that the reasons for women surgeons鈥 ergonomic issues are multifactorial, so too are the potential solutions, which range from physical, to mechanical, to cultural.

Improving Physical Strength

For Dr. Tejirian, one solution comes in recognizing that while instrumentation, environment, and positioning are critical components of preventing operating injuries, a surgeon鈥檚 basic physical strength cannot be neglected.

鈥淔or me, what I think surgeons need is nonnegotiable time to train their bodies to operate,鈥 Dr. Tejirian said. 鈥淵ou need to have your body in very good shape, since it鈥檚 in a certain position for hours and you鈥檒l need to twist it.鈥 She suggests that, in the same way that surgeons usually are afforded dedicated time to address other nonoperative elements of the job, such as education or meeting with patients, there should be an expectation for dedicated time to train one鈥檚 bodies. 鈥淵ou can maximize ergonomics, but that has its limits if it isn鈥檛 supported by a strong body. And women genetically just need to work on physical strength more. We need to work out more consistently to be able to maintain that athletic status. Distributing our strength in the correct ways is part of our job,鈥 she said.

ACS Surgical Ergonomics Clinic

Regardless of a surgeon鈥檚 personal experience with operating-related pain or injury and their adjustments to compensate, there is value in having an expert provide an individualized ergonomic assessment for any practicing surgeon. Such consultations can and should take place within a hospital or practice, but surgical education organizations, such as the ACS, can assist their members in understanding the importance of ergonomics.

To that end, through the work of its Surgical Ergonomics Committee, the ACS will host its first Surgical Ergonomics Hands-On Clinic for practicing surgeons and surgery residents at Clinical Congress 2022 in San Diego, CA. The clinic will feature three simulation stations with open, laparoscopic, and robotic surgery equipment to offer a hands-on learning experience in surgical ergonomics.

Ergonomic coaches will help participating surgeons learn about recently established ACS Surgical Ergonomics Recommendations and apply the recommendations in a simulated environment at each station. In addition, a certified physical therapist will share different stretching exercise protocols that can be implemented in the operating room, between cases, or at home. The clinic is the first step in an overall plan to positively address the ergonomic challenges surgeons experience, and its placement in the Exhibit Hall, among surgical device industry representatives, hopefully will spur action in creating more inclusive instrumentation that will meet the needs of women surgeons.

According to Gyusung Lee, PhD, the ACS staff leader of the Surgical Ergonomics Committee and an experienced surgical ergonomics researcher, 鈥淭he committee is very interested in the topic of ergonomics for women surgeons and wants to deliver recommendations to industry partners.鈥 Ideally, bringing awareness of the issue to industry will result in an increased range of tool design that will meet the needs of surgeons who fall outside the traditional average male鈥檚 size and strength.

Culture Change for Lasting Solutions

Long-lasting solutions for women surgeons will be found not in preventing or addressing an individual practitioner鈥檚 operating conditions, but rather in changing the culture of healthcare institutions and the field of surgery.聽

鈥淲e need to address the equipment, but also the culture,鈥 Dr. Lal said. 鈥淲e need to get our hospital leaders to understand that pain affects not just productivity for surgeons, but it also has a detrimental effect on their quality of life, their ability to teach, their well-being, and the quality of care they provide.鈥

For women, part of changing the culture will come through growing the representation of women leaders, as they will be able to lend an empathetic ear to their colleagues鈥 concerns.

鈥淗aving women surgeons in leadership is helpful because they have experience with the same pain and ergonomic issues that you do,鈥 Dr. Bohl said. On a smaller scale, she added that having a female attending was always a welcome experience because she could show her unique adaptations to help overcome issues of managing laparoscopic tools and positioning concerns.

But some of the most important lessons in changing culture come less through finding camaraderie among other women and more through making sure your voice is being heard. 鈥淲e need to be consistent and adamant when we ask for institutional support for proper tools and education. It鈥檚 easy to make the ask, for leadership to say, 鈥榃e can鈥檛 get that bed today, or we can鈥檛 find that tool,鈥 and then for the surgeon to make it work,鈥 Dr. Bohl said. 鈥淏ut the more we compromise, the more we incur the individual cost or injury.鈥澛

Consistency in voicing concerns and bringing the issues of women surgeons鈥 ergonomic pain to the attention of system leadership is critical. 鈥淥ne of the things that we can do is normalize that a surgeon鈥檚 physical health and ergonomics are important,鈥 according to Dr. Tejirian. 鈥淲e need to accommodate for all demographics of surgeons and educating staff, and it should become a given that we need to maximize the OR to make sure it is ideal for both male and female surgeons.鈥

Ultimately, changing the culture that filters down from leadership will require acknowledging that despite being responsible for alleviating the suffering of their patients, the work that surgeons do can cause pain itself. 鈥淧ain and musculoskeletal injury are aspects of medicine that haven鈥檛 been given much attention because in surgical culture, we historically haven鈥檛 talked about our pain,鈥 Dr. Lal said.聽

Women physicians often have felt that to succeed, they cannot come across as complaining about their unique difficulties. But, as Dr. Bohl notes, by continuing to talk about their ergonomic challenges, needs, and solutions, and by focusing on reducing pain for both patients and providers, women surgeons can position themselves to change their professional culture for the better.

鈥淓very system can react differently to suggestions for improvement. They can say, 鈥業t鈥檚 your problem,鈥 or they can respond and recognize that it鈥檚 a larger problem and help address it,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur goal is to make it so that the operating environment reduces fatigue, stress, and injury to optimize your longevity as a surgeon and optimize your patient outcomes.鈥澛


Matthew Fox is Digital Managing Editor, Division of Integrated Communications, Chicago IL.


References

  1. The Legislation. Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes Foundation website. Accessed July 5, 2022. Available at: .
  2. Statement on Surgeon Well-Being. 糖心网页版 website. Posted December 9, 2021. Accessed July 5, 2022. Available at: /about-acs/statements/surgeon-well-being.
  3. Aaron KA, Vaughan J, Gupta R, Ali N-E-S, Beth AH, Moore JM, et al. The risk of ergonomic injury across surgical specialties. PLoS ONE. 2021;16(2): e0244868.
  4. Martin N. Women surgeons and the challenges of 鈥渉aving it all.鈥 Stanford University Gender News website. Updated November 17, 2015. Available at: . Accessed July 5, 2022.聽
  5. Lim WH, Wong C, Jain SR, Ng CH, Tai CH, Devi MK, et al. (2021) The unspoken reality of gender bias in surgery: A qualitative systematic review. PLoS ONE. 2021;16(2): e0246420.
  6. Tran M, Kortz MW, Johnson B, Janis JE. Operation-related musculoskeletal injuries among United States surgeons: A gender-stratified national survey. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2022;10(2):别4142.听
  7. Balch B. Oversized and overlooked: Women surgeons struggle to find equipment that fits. Association of American Medical Colleges website. Posted April 22, 2022. Available at: . Accessed July 5, 2022.聽