Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, 530 NE Glen Oak Ave., Peoria, IL, 61637, USA.
Healthcare Engineering Systems Center, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1206 W. Clark St., Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg. 2024 May;19(5):881-889. doi: 10.1007/s11548-024-03072-8. Epub 2024 Feb 24.
Exposure to procedures varies in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). A method to teach procedures should be available without patient availability, expert oversight, or simulation laboratories. To fill this need, we developed a virtual reality (VR) simulation for umbilical vein catheter (UVC) placement and sought to establish its face and content validity and usability.
Engineers, software developers, graphic designers, and neonatologists developed a VR UVC placement simulator following a participatory design approach. The software was deployed on the Meta Quest 2 head-mounted display (HMD). Neonatal nurse practitioners (NNPs) from a level 4 NICU used the simulator and completed an 11-item questionnaire to establish face and content validity. Participants also completed the validated simulation task load index and system usability scale to assess the usability of the simulator. Group 1 tested the VR simulation, which was optimized based on feedback, prior to Group 2's participation.
A total of 14 NNPs with 2-37 years of experience participated in testing. Participants scored the content and face validity of the simulator highly, with most giving scores ≥ 4/5. Usability was established with relatively high average system usability scores for both groups (Group 1: 67.14 ± 7.8, Group 2: 71 ± 14.1) and low SIM-TLX scores indicating manageable load while using the simulator.
After optimization, Group 2 found the UVC simulator to be realistic and effective. Both groups felt the simulator was easy to use and did not cause physical or cognitive strain. All participants felt the UVC simulator provided a safe environment to make mistakes, and the majority would recommend this experience to trainees.
新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)中,操作的暴露程度存在差异。应该有一种方法可以在没有患者可用性、专家监督或模拟实验室的情况下教授操作。为了满足这一需求,我们开发了一种用于脐静脉导管(UVC)放置的虚拟现实(VR)模拟,并试图确立其表面有效性、内容有效性和可用性。
工程师、软件开发人员、图形设计师和新生儿科医生采用参与式设计方法开发了 VR UVC 放置模拟器。该软件部署在 Meta Quest 2 头戴式显示器(HMD)上。来自 4 级 NICU 的新生儿执业护士(NNP)使用模拟器并完成了 11 项问卷,以确定表面有效性和内容有效性。参与者还完成了经过验证的模拟任务负荷指数和系统可用性量表,以评估模拟器的可用性。在第 2 组参与之前,第 1 组测试了 VR 模拟,并根据反馈进行了优化。
共有 14 名具有 2-37 年经验的 NNP 参与了测试。参与者对模拟器的内容和表面有效性评价很高,大多数人给出的评分≥4/5。两组的平均系统可用性得分均较高,表明可用性得到了确立(第 1 组:67.14±7.8;第 2 组:71±14.1),而 SIM-TLX 分数较低,表明在使用模拟器时负荷可以控制。
经过优化后,第 2 组发现 UVC 模拟器具有现实性和有效性。两组均认为模拟器易于使用,不会造成身体或认知负担。所有参与者都认为 UVC 模拟器提供了一个可以犯错的安全环境,大多数人会向学员推荐这种体验。