Penn State, Department of Industrial Engineering, State College, 307 Engineering Design and Innovation Building, University Park, PA, 16801, USA.
WVU Critical Care and Trauma Institute, Morgantown, WV, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Aug 26;24(1):923. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-05747-x.
While women make up over 50% of students enrolled in medical school, disparities in self-efficacy of medical skills between men and women have been observed throughout medical education. This difference is significant because low self-efficacy can impact learning, achievement, and performance, and thus create gender-confidence gaps. Simulation-based training (SBT) employs assessments of self-efficacy, however, the Dunning-Kruger effect in self-assessment posits that trainees often struggle to recognize their skill level. Additionally, the impact of gender on self-efficacy during SBT has not been as widely studied. The objective of this study was to identify if the gender-confidence gap and the Dunning-Kruger effect exist in SBT for central venous catheterization (CVC) on the dynamic haptic robotic trainer (DHRT) utilizing comparisons of self-efficacy and performance.
173 surgical residents (N=61, N=112) underwent training on the DHRT system over two years. Before and after using the DHRT, residents completed a 14-item Central Line Self-Efficacy survey (CLSE). During training on the DHRT, CVC performance metrics of the number of insertion attempts, backwall puncture, and successful venipuncture were also collected. The pre- and post-CLSE, DHRT performance and their relationship were compared between men and women.
General estimating equation results indicated that women residents were significantly more likely to report lower self-efficacy for 9 of the 14 CLSE items (p < .0035). Mann-Whitney U and Fisher's exact tests showed there were no performance differences between men and women for successfully accessing the vein on the DHRT. Regression models relating performance and self-efficacy found no correlation for either gender.
These results indicate that despite receiving the same SBT and performing at the same level, the gender-confidence gap exists in CVC SBT, and the Dunning-Kruger effect may also be evident.
尽管女性在医学院学生中占比超过 50%,但在整个医学教育过程中,男性和女性在医学技能自我效能方面存在差异。这种差异很重要,因为低自我效能会影响学习、成就和表现,从而造成性别信心差距。基于模拟的培训 (SBT) 采用自我效能评估,但自我评估中的邓宁-克鲁格效应表明,学员往往难以认识到自己的技能水平。此外,SBT 中性别对自我效能的影响尚未得到广泛研究。本研究的目的是确定在利用自我效能和表现的比较,利用动态触觉机器人训练器 (DHRT) 进行中心静脉置管 (CVC) 的 SBT 中是否存在性别信心差距和邓宁-克鲁格效应。
173 名外科住院医师(N=61,N=112)在两年内接受了 DHRT 系统的培训。在使用 DHRT 前后,住院医师完成了 14 项中心静脉导管自我效能调查 (CLSE)。在 DHRT 培训过程中,还收集了 CVC 性能指标,包括插入尝试次数、后壁穿刺和成功静脉穿刺。比较了男性和女性在 CLSE 前后、DHRT 表现及其之间的关系。
一般估计方程结果表明,在 14 项 CLSE 项目中,女性住院医师有 9 项报告的自我效能明显较低(p < .0035)。曼-惠特尼 U 检验和 Fisher 精确检验显示,男性和女性在 DHRT 上成功进入静脉的表现没有差异。将表现与自我效能相关的回归模型发现,两种性别之间均无相关性。
这些结果表明,尽管接受了相同的 SBT 并表现相同,但 CVC SBT 中存在性别信心差距,并且邓宁-克鲁格效应也可能明显。