Turbati Mia S, Goldblatt Matthew I, Gould Jon C, Higgins Rana M
Division of Minimally Invasive and Gastrointestinal Surgery, Department of Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, 8701 Watertown Plank Road, Milwaukee, WI, 53226, USA.
Surg Endosc. 2023 Mar;37(3):2304-2315. doi: 10.1007/s00464-022-09558-3. Epub 2022 Aug 24.
The da Vinci skills simulation curriculum has been validated in the literature. The updated simulator, SimNow, features restructured exercises that have not been formally validated. The purpose of this study is to validate the SimNow resident robotic basic simulation curriculum. This study also consists of a qualitative assessment that gives greater insight into the learner's experience completing the robotic curriculum.
There were 18 participants in this study: 6 novices, 6 competent surgeons, and 6 expert surgeons. The curriculum comprised 5 exercises; participants completed three consecutive scored trials. Computer-derived performance metrics were recorded. The NASA Task Load Index survey was used to assess subjective mental workload. Subjects were asked a series of open-ended questions regarding their experience that were recorded and transcribed. Codes were identified using an inductive method, and themes were generated.
Performance metrics were significantly different between novice versus competent and expert surgeons. There was no significant difference in any score metric between competent and expert surgeons. On average, overall score percentages for competent and expert surgeons were between 90.4 and 92.8% versus 70.5% for novices (p = 0.02 and p = 0.01). Expert surgeons perceived a higher level of performance completing the exercises than novice surgeons (15.8 vs. 45.8, p = 0.02). Participants noted a similar robotic experience, utilizing efficiency of motion and visual field skills. Participants agreed on exercise strengths, exercise weaknesses, and software limitations. Competent and expert surgeons were better able to assess the exercises' clinical application.
The SimNow curriculum is a valid simulation training as part of a general surgery resident robotic curriculum. The curriculum distinguishes between novices compared to competent and expert surgeons, but not between competent and expert surgeons. Clinical training level does not affect the experience and mental workload using the robotic simulator, except for competent and expert surgeons' ability to better assess clinical application.
达芬奇技能模拟课程已在文献中得到验证。更新后的模拟器SimNow具有经过重新组织的练习,但尚未经过正式验证。本研究的目的是验证SimNow住院医师机器人基础模拟课程。本研究还包括一项定性评估,以更深入地了解学习者完成机器人课程的体验。
本研究有18名参与者:6名新手、6名熟练外科医生和6名专家外科医生。课程包括5项练习;参与者连续完成三次计分试验。记录计算机得出的性能指标。使用美国国家航空航天局任务负荷指数调查来评估主观心理负荷。向受试者询问了一系列关于他们经验的开放式问题,并进行了记录和转录。使用归纳法确定代码,并生成主题。
新手与熟练外科医生和专家外科医生之间的性能指标存在显著差异。熟练外科医生和专家外科医生在任何分数指标上均无显著差异。平均而言,熟练外科医生和专家外科医生的总体得分百分比在90.4%至92.8%之间,而新手为70.5%(p = 0.02和p = 0.01)。专家外科医生在完成练习时的表现水平高于新手外科医生(15.8对45.8,p = 0.02)。参与者指出了相似的机器人操作体验,包括动作效率和视野技能的运用。参与者对练习的优点、缺点和软件局限性达成了共识。熟练外科医生和专家外科医生能够更好地评估练习的临床应用。
SimNow课程作为普通外科住院医师机器人课程的一部分,是一种有效的模拟培训。该课程能够区分新手与熟练外科医生和专家外科医生,但不能区分熟练外科医生和专家外科医生。临床培训水平不影响使用机器人模拟器的体验和心理负荷,除了熟练外科医生和专家外科医生能够更好地评估临床应用的能力。