“…32 However, another study, pertaining to the field of general surgery, showed that resident involvement in laparoscopic cholecystectomy was associated with a shorter length of hospital stay, lower morbidity, and comparable overall mortality. 19 Our study concludes, through a robust statistical analysis and a sufficiently large sample size drawn from a large, multi-center database of hospitals throughout the United States, that resident participation in surgery does not negatively affect clinical outcomes, in terms of morbidity and mortality. This is despite the fact that residents were typically involved in more complex cases, as evidenced by the fact that the resident involvement subgroup had higher work value units and a higher percentage of emergency cases, infected surgical wounds preoperatively, perioperative blood transfusions, previous surgical interventions within 30 days, diabetes, sepsis, abnormal preoperative laboratory values, and disseminated cancer.…”