# Surgical training for simple and complex hernia repair in the UK: results of a nationwide training survey

**Authors:** R Willmott, SG Parker, D Slade, S Halligan, D Sanders, DR Clyde, L Smith, P Daliya, JD Hodgkinson, T Badenoch, D Damaskos, O Ali, J Torkington, R Thomas

PMC · DOI: 10.1308/rcsann.2025.0065 · Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England · 2025-10-01

## TL;DR

UK surgical trainees lack sufficient training and confidence in complex hernia repair procedures, according to a nationwide survey.

## Contribution

This study identifies gaps in UK surgical training for complex hernia repair and highlights the need for curriculum improvements.

## Key findings

- Trainees had limited exposure to complex hernia procedures like recurrent inguinal and component separation repairs.
- Confidence scores were highest for simple hernia repairs and lowest for complex ones.
- Only open inguinal and umbilical hernia repairs met curriculum requirements.

## Abstract

Abdominal wall reconstruction (AWR) is increasingly recognised as a subspecialty in general surgery, owing to the growing complexity and advancement of hernia repair techniques. Concerns have been raised among UK hernia specialists about current surgical training adequately preparing trainees for both simple and complex hernia procedures.

A CHERRIES-compliant survey was developed by a panel of hernia experts to evaluate UK training in hernia surgery. The 41-item questionnaire assessed perceived competence and confidence in performing eight types of hernia repair, categorised as simple (primary inguinal, umbilical, laparoscopic inguinal and Rives–Stoppa) or complex (recurrent inguinal, component separation and parastomal hernia repair), along with broader AWR-related topics (open abdomen management, participation in multidisciplinary meetings). The survey was disseminated via social media, targeted chat groups and surgical conferences.

The survey was conducted from 21 January to 27 September 2024. Of approximately 500 possible respondents, 116 completed the survey (47 surgical trainees (ST) 7–8s, 30 clinical fellows and 34 consultants), yielding an estimated 22.2% response rate. Curriculum requirements were met only for open inguinal and umbilical hernia repair. Although there are no formal curriculum requirements for complex repairs, trainee exposure remains limited; two-thirds had performed fewer than ten recurrent inguinal or component separation procedures. For parastomal hernias, confidence was highest with suture repair despite these being associated with poor outcomes. Overall, median confidence scores were highest for simple repairs and lowest for complex ones.

Current UK surgical training provides inadequate exposure to complex AWR, highlighting the need for targeted curriculum improvement.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** inguinal and umbilical hernia (MESH:D006554), hernia (MESH:D006547)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

16 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13038358/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13038358