Ghazanfar Mudassar Ali, Cook Malcolm, Tang Benjie, Tait Iain, Alijani Afshin
Cuschieri Skills Centre, University of Dundee, Level 5 Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, DD1 9SY, Scotland, UK,
Surg Endosc. 2015 Mar;29(3):614-9. doi: 10.1007/s00464-014-3708-2. Epub 2014 Jul 17.
Attention is important for the skilful execution of surgery. The surgeon's attention during surgery is divided between surgery and outside distractions. The effect of this divided attention has not been well studied previously. We aimed to compare the effect of dividing attention of novices and experts on a laparoscopic task performance.
Following ethical approval, 25 novices and 9 expert surgeons performed a standardised peg transfer task in a laboratory setup under three randomly assigned conditions: silent as control condition and two standardised auditory distracting tasks requiring response (easy and difficult) as study conditions. Human reliability assessment was used for surgical task analysis. Primary outcome measures were correct auditory responses, task time, number of surgical errors and instrument movements. Secondary outcome measures included error rate, error probability and hand specific differences. Non-parametric statistics were used for data analysis.
21109 movements and 9036 total errors were analysed. Novices had increased mean task completion time (seconds) (171 ± 44SD vs. 149 ± 34, p < 0.05), number of total movements (227 ± 27 vs. 213 ± 26, p < 0.05) and number of errors (127 ± 51 vs. 96 ± 28, p < 0.05) during difficult study conditions compared to control. The correct responses to auditory stimuli were less frequent in experts (68 %) compared to novices (80 %). There was a positive correlation between error rate and error probability in novices (r (2) = 0.533, p < 0.05) but not in experts (r (2) = 0.346, p > 0.05).
Divided attention conditions in theatre environment require careful consideration during surgical training as the junior surgeons are less able to focus their attention during these conditions.
注意力对于手术的熟练执行很重要。外科医生在手术过程中的注意力在手术操作和外界干扰之间分配。此前,这种注意力分散的影响尚未得到充分研究。我们旨在比较新手和专家注意力分散对腹腔镜任务表现的影响。
经伦理批准后,25名新手和9名专家外科医生在实验室环境下,于三种随机分配的条件下执行一项标准化的栓子转移任务:安静作为对照条件,以及两项需要做出反应的标准化听觉干扰任务(简单和困难)作为研究条件。使用人因可靠性评估进行手术任务分析。主要结局指标为正确的听觉反应、任务时间、手术错误数量和器械移动次数。次要结局指标包括错误率、错误概率和手部特定差异。数据分析采用非参数统计。
分析了21109次动作和9036次总错误。与对照相比,新手在困难研究条件下的平均任务完成时间(秒)增加(171±44标准差 vs. 149±34,p<0.05)、总动作次数(227±27 vs. 213±26,p<0.05)和错误次数(127±51 vs. 96±28,p<0.05)。与新手(80%)相比,专家对听觉刺激的正确反应频率较低(68%)。新手错误率与错误概率之间存在正相关(r(2)=0.533,p<0.05),而专家中不存在(r(2)=0.346,p>0.05)。
由于初级外科医生在这些情况下较难集中注意力,因此在手术培训期间需要仔细考虑手术室环境中的注意力分散情况。