Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering.
Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation.
Iowa Orthop J. 2020;40(1):25-34.
Many orthopedic surgeries involve the challenging integration of fluoroscopic image interpretation with skillful tool manipulation to enable procedures to be performed through less invasive approaches. Simulation has proved beneficial for teaching and improving these skills for residents, but similar benefits have not yet been realized for practicing orthopedic surgeons. A vision is presented to elevate community orthopedic practice and improve patient safety by advancing the use of simulators for training and assessing surgical skills.
Key elements of this vision that are established include 1) methods for the objective and rigorous assessment of the performance of practicing surgeons now exist, 2) simulators are sufficiently mature and sophisticated that practicing surgeons will use them, and 3) practicing surgeons can improve their performance with appropriate feedback and coaching.
Data presented indicate that surgical performance can be adequately and comparably measured using structured observations made by experts or non-expert crowds, with the crowdsourcing approach being more expedient and less expensive. Rigorous measures of the surgical result and intermediate objectives obtained semi-automatically from intra-operative fluoroscopic image sequences can distinguish performances of experts from novices. Experience suggests that practicing orthopedic surgeons are open to and can be constructively engaged by a family of mature simulators as a means to evaluate and improve their surgical skills.
The results presented support our contention that new objective assessment measures are sufficient for evaluating the performance of working surgeons. The novel class of orthopedic surgical simulators available were tested and approved by practicing physicians. There exists a clear opportunity to combine purpose-designed simulator exercises with virtual coaching to help practicing physicians retain, retrain, and improve their technical skills. This will ultimately reduce cost, increase the quality of care, and decrease complication rates.
This vision articulates a means to boost the confidence of practitioners and ease their anxiety so that they perform impactful procedures more often in community hospitals, which promises to improve treatment and reduce the cost of care while keeping patients closer to their homes and families.
许多骨科手术都涉及到具有挑战性的透视图像解读与熟练工具操作的结合,以实现通过微创方法进行的手术。模拟已被证明对住院医师的教学和技能提高有益,但类似的益处尚未在实践中的骨科医生中实现。本文提出了一个愿景,通过推进模拟器在培训和评估手术技能中的应用,提升社区骨科实践水平并提高患者安全性。
该愿景的关键要素包括:1)现有的客观、严格评估执业外科医生绩效的方法已经建立;2)模拟器已经足够成熟和先进,执业外科医生将使用它们;3)执业外科医生可以通过适当的反馈和指导来提高他们的表现。
所呈现的数据表明,使用专家或非专家人群进行的结构化观察,可以充分且可比地衡量手术表现,而众包方法更为快捷且成本更低。从术中透视图像序列中半自动获取的手术结果和中间目标的严格衡量标准可以区分专家和新手的表现。经验表明,执业骨科医生愿意并可以通过一系列成熟的模拟器进行建设性参与,以评估和提高他们的手术技能。
所呈现的结果支持我们的观点,即新的客观评估措施足以评估在职外科医生的表现。现有的新型骨科手术模拟器已通过执业医师的测试和批准。有明确的机会将专门设计的模拟器练习与虚拟指导相结合,以帮助执业医生保留、再培训和提高他们的技术技能。这最终将降低成本、提高护理质量并降低并发症发生率。
这一愿景阐明了一种增强从业者信心并减轻其焦虑的方法,使他们更频繁地在社区医院进行有影响力的手术,从而有望改善治疗效果并降低护理成本,同时使患者更接近他们的家庭和亲人。