National Institute of Ophthalmology, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Indian J Ophthalmol. 2023 Aug;71(8):3064-3068. doi: 10.4103/IJO.IJO_381_23.
To profile vitreoretinal (VR) fellows-in-training from India exposed to the Eyesi surgical simulator, to identify potential barriers to voluntary use, and enumerate the most preferred tools and tasks before incorporating them into a formal skill-transfer curriculum.
A questionnaire consisting of 22 questions was designed and circulated through an online portal (surveymonkey.com) to four different institutes of India having a VR surgical fellowship program and using a functional Eyesi (Haag-Streit) simulator. All fellows and trainees who were exposed to the simulator were eligible to participate, irrespective of time spent on the simulator and exposure to training steps on real patients. The responses collected were private and anonymous.
Of the 37 respondents, most (n = 25, 68%) considered surgical simulators to be the best training tool before operating on the human eye. A majority (n = 35, 94.5%) of participants spent <3 h per week on the simulator, which, most (n = 30, 81%) felt was not enough time. The main reasons for this underutilization were work-hour limitations (54.8%), lack of a structured training program (19.3%), or a dedicated supervisor (16.1%). Again, the majority (n = 33, 89%) of participants responded that VR surgical skills acquired during simulator training were transferrable to the operating room, which was reflected by their response (n = 31, 83.7%) that simulator-based training should be made mandatory before operating room exposure.
This study gives an insight into the overall practice patterns and preferences in simulation training of surgical VR fellows-in-training across India. It indicates that the simulator is extremely helpful to fellows and if adopted, VR surgical simulators with organized, directed, and supervised sessions will considerably improve the surgical training experience.
对在 Eyesi 手术模拟器中接受培训的印度玻璃体视网膜(VR)研究员进行概况描述,以确定他们自愿使用模拟器的潜在障碍,并在将其纳入正式技能转移课程之前,列举他们最偏好的工具和任务。
设计了一份包含 22 个问题的问卷,并通过在线门户(surveymonkey.com)分发给印度的四个拥有 VR 外科研究员项目并使用功能性 Eyesi(Haag-Streit)模拟器的机构。所有接触过模拟器的研究员和学员,无论他们在模拟器上花费的时间以及在真实患者身上接受的培训步骤如何,都有资格参与。收集到的回复是私密和匿名的。
在 37 位受访者中,大多数(n = 25,68%)认为手术模拟器是在人眼上进行手术之前的最佳培训工具。大多数参与者(n = 35,94.5%)每周在模拟器上花费的时间<3 小时,他们大多数(n = 30,81%)认为这时间不够。这种利用率低的主要原因是工作时间限制(54.8%)、缺乏结构化培训计划(19.3%)或缺乏专门的主管(16.1%)。同样,大多数参与者(n = 33,89%)表示,他们在模拟器培训中获得的 VR 手术技能可以转移到手术室,这反映在他们的回答中(n = 31,83.7%),即应该在手术室暴露之前强制进行基于模拟器的培训。
这项研究深入了解了印度各地 VR 研究员在模拟培训中的整体实践模式和偏好。它表明模拟器对研究员非常有帮助,如果采用,具有组织、指导和监督课程的 VR 手术模拟器将大大改善手术培训体验。