DocumentCode
9662
Title
Vertebroplasty Performance on Simulator for 19 Surgeons Using Hierarchical Task Analysis
Author
Wucherer, Patrick ; Stefan, Philipp ; Abhari, Kamyar ; Fallavollita, Pascal ; Weigl, Matthias ; Lazarovici, Marc ; Winkler, Alexander ; Weidert, Simon ; Peters, Terry ; de Ribaupierre, Sandrine ; Eagleson, Roy ; Navab, Nassir
Author_Institution
Comput. Aided Med. Procedures, Tech. Univ. Munchen, Munich, Germany
Volume
34
Issue
8
fYear
2015
fDate
Aug. 2015
Firstpage
1730
Lastpage
1737
Abstract
We present a unique simulator-based methodology for assessing both technical and nontechnical (cognitive) skills for surgical trainees while immersed in a complete medical simulation environment. Further, we have included two crisis scenarios which allow for the evaluation of the effect of cognitive strategy selection on the low-level surgical skills. Training these mixed-mode scenarios can thereby be evaluated on our platform, allowing for improved assessment and a stronger foundation for credentialing, with the potential to reduce the occurrence of adverse events in the operating room. Scientific evaluation and validation of our work is conducted together with 19 junior surgeons in order to achieve the following goals: 1) to provide a qualitative measure of usability, 2) to assess vertebroplasty technical performance of the surgeon, and 3) to explore the relationship between mental workload and surgical performance during crisis. Our results indicate that: 1) the surgeons scored the face validity of our modeled simulation environment very highly ( 4.68 ±0.48, using a 5-point Likert scale), 2) surgeon training enabled completion of tasks more quickly, and 3) the introduction of crisis scenarios negatively affected the surgeons´ objective performance. Taken together, our results underscore the need to develop realistic simulation environments that prepare young residents to respond to emergent events in the operating room.
Keywords
diagnostic radiography; medical diagnostic computing; surgery; virtual reality; 5-point Likert scale; cognitive strategy selection; complete medical simulation environment; face validity; fluoroscopy; hierarchical task analysis; low-level surgical skills; mental workload; mixed-mode scenarios; modeled simulation environment; nontechnical cognitive skills; realistic simulation environments; simulator-based methodology; surgical performance; surgical trainees; technical cognitive skills; vertebroplasty technical performance; Biomedical imaging; Bones; Haptic interfaces; Instruments; Solid modeling; Surgery; Training; Hierarchal task analysis; medical simulation environment; surgical skill training; surgical workflow; vertebroplasty; virtual reality;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0062
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMI.2015.2389033
Filename
7004864
Link To Document