273: We Measure What We Can, Not What Matters
Monday, November 16, 2026
2:00 pm - 3:15 pm
Room: BALLRM-ABC
Chairs: Randa J. Jalloul
Faculty:
Description: Modern gynecologic surgery excels at measuring what is
easy—operative time, blood loss, length of stay, and complication rates—but
often fails to measure what patients define as success. True surgical
excellence is not determined in the operating room, but in the patient's
life afterward. This MEDTalk challenges surgeons to rethink how success is
defined, measured, and communicated in Minimally Invasive Gynecologic
Surgery (MIGS), shifting the focus from surgeon-centered metrics to
patient-defined outcomes.
Objective #1: Challenge entrenched definitions of surgical
success
Objective #2: Encourage adoption of patient-defined
outcomes in daily practice
Objective #3: Improve counseling, expectation management,
and satisfaction and align surgical excellence with patient autonomy and
outcomes-driven care
Medtalk Presenter: Randa Jalloul
Learning Objectives: At the end of this course, the participant will be able to:
- Challenge entrenched definitions of surgical success
- Encourage adoption of patient-defined outcomes in daily practice
- Improve counseling, expectation management, and satisfaction and align surgical excellence with patient autonomy and outcomes-driven care
900 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02115
United States