DOAP Checklists

DOAP: Practical Examples and Mini-Checklists (General Surgery)

Below are concise, student-friendly checklists you can adapt to your logbook. Always follow your hospital’s protocols.

A) Simple Interrupted Suturing of a Superficial Wound

  1. Pre-procedure
  • Confirm indication (clean, superficial laceration; depth checked)
  • Allergies, tetanus status, consent
  • Equipment: sterile gloves, 3-0 or 4-0 nylon, needle holder, toothed forceps, scissors, sterile gauze, saline, LA, dressing
  1. Asepsis and LA
  • Hand hygiene, sterile gloves
  • Clean and irrigate wound thoroughly (copious saline)
  • Infiltrate LA (aspirate before injection, dose limit)
  1. Technique
  • Evert edges; enter skin ~0.5–1 cm from edge at 90°
  • Follow needle’s curvature; symmetric bites
  • Tie secure square knots; cut tails ~5–7 mm
  • Spacing: ~5–10 mm between sutures depending on tension
  1. Post-procedure
  • Hemostasis check; apply sterile dressing
  • Documentation: size, location, number of sutures, material, LA used
  • Advice: keep dry 24–48 h, review for removal (face: 3–5 days; trunk/upper limb: 7–10 days; lower limb: 10–14 days), warning signs

Common pitfalls: poor irrigation, inverted edges, crushing tissue, over-tightening causing ischemia.


B) Incision and Drainage (I&D) of a Small Abscess

  1. Pre-procedure
  • Confirm fluctuation; rule out deeper involvement
  • Check diabetes/anticoagulants; consent
  • Equipment: scalpel, forceps, hemostat, saline, gauze, iodoform/pack if used, LA
  1. Asepsis and LA
  • Prepare skin; LA infiltration around abscess (avoid injecting pus cavity)
  • Adequate analgesia; consider systemic analgesic
  1. Technique
  • Incise over most fluctuant area (usually along skin crease or Langer’s lines)
  • Break loculations with hemostat; express pus safely
  • Irrigate cavity; pack loosely if indicated (institutional practice varies)
  1. Post-procedure
  • Dressing; send pus for culture if indicated
  • Documentation and advice: dressing changes, analgesia, glycemic control, red flags

Common pitfalls: too small incision, inadequate drainage, missing loculations, tight packing causing pain/ischemia.


C) Nasogastric (Ryle’s) Tube Insertion

  1. Pre-procedure
  • Indication (decompression, feeding, aspiration)
  • Contraindications (base of skull fracture, severe facial trauma), consent/explanation
  • Equipment: NG tube, lubricant, stethoscope, tape, syringe
  1. Technique
  • Measure NEX (Nose–Earlobe–Xiphoid); mark length
  • Sit patient up; lubricate; insert via most patent nostril
  • Ask patient to sip water; advance with swallowing
  • Confirm position (aspirate gastric contents; pH if available; air insufflation + epigastric auscultation; institutional radiograph policy if required)
  1. Post-procedure
  • Fix tube; check patency
  • Document size, side, length at nostril, confirmation method
  • Explain care and warning signs

Common pitfalls: coiling in mouth, misplacement, inadequate confirmation.


D) Suture Removal and Dressing

  1. Assess wound healing; signs of infection/dehiscence
  2. Equipment: sterile scissors, forceps, antiseptic, dressing
  3. Remove alternate sutures first; support wound; cut suture near skin to avoid dragging externalized suture inside
  4. Apply steri-strips if tension
  5. Document and advise return if redness/discharge

Sample DOPS Walkthroughs

DOPS Example 1: Suturing a 2-cm Forearm Laceration in Casualty

  • Pre-brief: Student states plan using ICSAFE.
  • Observation focus:
    • Checks consent, allergy, tetanus
    • Irrigates adequately
    • Correct needle holder grip (thumb–ring finger or thumb–middle finger per faculty preference)
    • Eversion achieved, knots flat, appropriate spacing
    • Communicates with patient, reassures during LA and suturing
    • Avoids crossing sterile fields; safe sharps disposal
  • Feedback:
    • Strengths: Gentle tissue handling, good eversion
    • Improvements: Slightly wider bites near wound end; verbalize post-procedure advice more clearly
    • Plan: Practice two more sutures on pad focusing on bite width; next case attempt full closure again

DOPS Example 2: I&D of Small Gluteal Abscess in Minor OT

  • Observation focus:
    • Adequate LA, tests for analgesia before incision
    • Incision length appropriate, direction along crease
    • Breaks loculations; irrigates until clear
    • Loose packing and clear home-care instructions
  • Feedback:
    • Strengths: Asepsis and patient comfort
    • Improvements: Incision initially too small—needed extension for complete drainage
    • Plan: In next sim practice, mark expected incision length before cutting

How Many DOPS Do You Need?

  • There’s no universal magic number; many programs aim for multiple low-stakes DOPS across different skills and contexts to ensure reliability.
  • Practical tip: Aim for 2–3 DOPS per core skill across the posting, spaced over time. Your department will set the exact requirement.

Common Pitfalls and How DOAP/DOPS Help

  • Skipping irrigation before suturing → DOAP emphasizes wound preparation; DOPS catches the lapse in real time.
  • Inverted wound edges → DOAP demo shows needle angle and eversion; DOPS feedback corrects technique.
  • Poor consent or communication → DOPS explicitly rates communication; you’ll get concrete feedback.
  • Weak aseptic technique → Both DOAP checklists and DOPS ratings keep asepsis front and center.
  • Incomplete drainage in I&D → DOAP teaches incision length/loculation breaking; DOPS validates completeness.

Tips to Excel (Student Playbook)

  • Before the case:
    • Revise steps using ICSAFE; visualize the procedure.
    • Check equipment yourself—don’t assume it’s all there.
    • Introduce yourself to the patient; gain trust early.
  • During the case:
    • Narrate key steps briefly to your assessor (“Now I’ll irrigate with copious saline…”).
    • Mind ergonomics: patient height, your posture, instrument handling.
    • Be gentle, respect tissues, and be safe with sharps.
  • After the case:
    • Give clear post-procedure advice in simple language.
    • Document concisely but completely.
    • Ask for one actionable improvement if time is short.
  • Practice routine:
    • 10–15 minutes daily on knot tying and suturing on a pad improves your DOPS performance dramatically.
    • Video yourself (if allowed) on a task trainer; compare to faculty demo.

Short Templates You Can Use

DOAP Session Note (Student)

  • Skill: Simple interrupted suturing
  • Date, Faculty:
  • Key points learned:
    • Needle angle and depth for eversion
    • Irrigation volume
    • Knot security (square knots, 3–1–1)
  • Practice plan:
    • 20 sutures on pad this week
    • Next: supervised suturing in minor OT

DOPS Quick Log

  • Procedure: NG tube insertion
  • Setting: Ward
  • Complexity: Routine
  • Feedback (strengths): Calm communication; correct NEX measurement
  • Feedback (improve): Confirm placement verbally with pH method if available
  • Action plan: Carry pH strips; memorize documentation template
  • Assessor signature:

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Is DOAP only for simulators?
    • No. It often begins in the skills lab, but the Assist and Perform stages transition to real patients under supervision.
  • Is DOPS pass/fail?
    • It’s primarily formative. Repeated DOPS build a reliable picture of your competence. Some programs also use it summatively—check your local policy.
  • What if I get nervous in DOPS?
    • Everyone does at first. Use ICSAFE as your mental checklist, narrate calmly, and focus on safety. Assessors are there to help you improve.
  • Can I choose the case for DOPS?
    • Often yes (within reason). Pick appropriately challenging cases at your level.
  • What counts most in DOPS—speed or safety?
    • Safety and systematic technique. Efficiency comes with practice, but never at the cost of asepsis or patient comfort.

Bringing It All Together: A Student-Centered View

  • DOAP is your roadmap for learning a procedure safely and correctly.
  • DOPS is your chance to show you can do it with a patient—and to get targeted coaching.
  • In general surgery postings, combine both:
    • Learn in the lab → assist in minor OT → perform under supervision → get observed and coached via DOPS.
  • Keep your learning active: checklists, reflections, and small daily practice add up to big gains.

Take-Home Messages

  • Use ICSAFE for any procedure: Indications, Consent, Setup, Asepsis/Analgesia, Focused steps, End with aftercare and documentation.
  • Treat DOAP as your practice ladder and DOPS as your performance mirror.
  • Focus on asepsis, tissue respect, communication, and documentation—they’re universally assessed.
  • Build confidence with repetition on task trainers, then transfer to patients under supervision.
  • Ask for feedback; own your action plan; track progress in your logbook.

You’ve got this. With DOAP to build your skills and DOPS to refine them, CBME becomes practical, patient-centered, and achievable—one safe, well-executed procedure at a time.