Lopez Gregory, Martin David F, Wright Rick, Jung James, Hahn Peter, Jain Nickul, Bracey Daniel N, Gupta Ranjan
From Rush University, Chicago, IL (Dr. Lopez), Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC (Dr. Martin and Dr. Bracey), the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO (Dr. Wright), and the Department of Orthopaedics, University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA (Dr. Jung, Dr. Hahn, Dr. Jain, and Dr. Gupta).
J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2016 Dec;24(12):886-894. doi: 10.5435/JAAOS-D-16-00191.
Arthroscopy is one of the most challenging surgical skills to assess and teach. Although basic psychomotor arthroscopic skills, such as triangulation and object manipulation, are incorporated into many simulation exercises, they are not always individually taught or objectively evaluated. In addition, arthroscopic instruments, arthroscopy cameras, and the cadaver or joint models necessary for practice are costly.
A low-cost arthroscopic simulator was created to practice triangulation, probing, horizon changes, suture management, and object manipulation. The simulator materials were purchased exclusively from national hardware stores with a total cost averaging $79. The universal serial bus (USB) camera is included in the total cost. Three residency programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education were tested on the simulator. Replica boards were created at each institution. Participants included medical students (20), residents (46), and attending physicians (9).
Construct validity-the ability to differentiate between novice, intermediate, and senior level participants-was obtained. On all tasks, junior residents scored at a statistically significant lower rate than senior residents and attending physicians.
This cost-effective arthroscopic surgical simulator objectively demonstrated that attending physicians and senior residents performed at a higher level than junior residents and novice medical students. The results of this study demonstrate that this simulator could be an important training tool for resident education.
关节镜检查是评估和教学中最具挑战性的外科技术之一。尽管许多模拟练习中纳入了基本的关节镜手术心理运动技能,如三角定位和物体操作,但它们并不总是单独授课或进行客观评估。此外,关节镜器械、关节镜摄像机以及练习所需的尸体或关节模型成本高昂。
制作了一种低成本的关节镜模拟器,用于练习三角定位、探查、视野变化、缝线管理和物体操作。模拟器材料均从国内五金店购买,总成本平均为79美元。总成本中包含通用串行总线(USB)摄像头。对三个经研究生医学教育认证委员会认证的住院医师培训项目在该模拟器上进行了测试。每个机构都制作了仿制品板。参与者包括医学生(20名)、住院医师(46名)和主治医生(9名)。
获得了结构效度,即区分新手、中级和高级参与者的能力。在所有任务中,初级住院医师的得分在统计学上显著低于高级住院医师和主治医生。
这种经济高效的关节镜手术模拟器客观地表明,主治医生和高级住院医师的表现高于初级住院医师和新手医学生。本研究结果表明,该模拟器可能是住院医师教育的重要培训工具。