Department of Neurosurgery, Bioskills Training Center, Naval Medical Readiness Training Command, San Diego, California, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California, USA; Department of Neurosurgery, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Department of Surgery, Bioskills Training Center, Naval Medical Readiness Training Command, San Diego, California, USA; Bioskills Training Center, Naval Medical Readiness Training Command, San Diego, California, USA; 1st Medical Battalion, 1st Marine Logistics Group, Camp Pendleton, California, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2022 Nov;167:e1335-e1344. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2022.09.033. Epub 2022 Sep 11.
The U.S. military requires medical readiness to support forward-deployed combat operations. Because time and distance to neurosurgical capabilities vary within the deployed trauma system, nonneurosurgeons are required to perform emergent cranial procedures in select cases. It is unclear whether these surgeons have sufficient training in these procedures.
This quality-improvement study involved a voluntary, anonymized specialty-specific survey of active-duty surgeons about their experience and attitudes toward U.S. military emergency neurosurgical training.
Survey responses were received from 104 general surgeons and 26 neurosurgeons. Among general surgeons, 81% have deployed and 53% received training in emergency neurosurgical procedures before deployment. Only 16% of general surgeons reported participating in craniotomy/craniectomy procedures in the last year. Nine general surgeons reported performing an emergency neurosurgical procedure while on deployment/humanitarian mission, and 87% of respondents expressed interest in further predeployment emergency neurosurgery training. Among neurosurgeons, 81% had participated in training nonneurosurgeons and 73% believe that more comprehensive training for nonneurosurgeons before deployment is needed. General surgeons proposed lower procedure minimums for competency for external ventricular drain placement and craniotomy/craniectomy than did neurosurgeons. Only 37% of general surgeons had used mixed/augmented reality in any capacity previously; for combat procedures, most (90%) would prefer using synchronous supervision via high-fidelity video teleconferencing over mixed reality.
These survey results show a gap in readiness for neurosurgical procedures for forward-deployed general surgeons. Capitalizing on capabilities such as mixed/augmented reality would be a force multiplier and a potential means of improving neurosurgical capabilities in the forward-deployed environments.
美国军方需要保持医疗准备状态,以支持前沿部署的作战行动。由于部署创伤系统内的神经外科能力的时间和距离各不相同,因此需要非神经外科医生在特定情况下进行紧急颅脑手术。目前尚不清楚这些外科医生是否接受过这些手术的充分培训。
本质量改进研究涉及一项针对现役外科医生的自愿、匿名的专业特定调查,内容是关于他们对美国军事紧急神经外科培训的经验和态度。
共收到 104 名普通外科医生和 26 名神经外科医生的调查回复。在普通外科医生中,81%的人曾部署过,53%的人在部署前接受过紧急神经外科手术培训。只有 16%的普通外科医生报告在过去一年中进行过开颅/去骨瓣手术。9 名普通外科医生报告在部署/人道主义任务期间进行了紧急神经外科手术,87%的受访者表示有兴趣进一步接受部署前的紧急神经外科培训。在神经外科医生中,81%的人曾参与过对非神经外科医生的培训,73%的人认为在部署前更需要对非神经外科医生进行全面的培训。普通外科医生提出的外部脑室引流和开颅/去骨瓣手术的最低能力要求低于神经外科医生。只有 37%的普通外科医生以前曾以任何身份使用过混合/增强现实;对于战斗程序,大多数(90%)人更愿意通过高保真视频电话会议使用同步监督来代替混合现实。
这些调查结果表明,前沿部署的普通外科医生在神经外科手术方面的准备存在差距。利用混合/增强现实等能力将是一种力量倍增器,也是提高前沿部署环境中神经外科能力的一种潜在手段。