Initial Experience of Using First-Person Wearable Video Recording Technology During Central Venous Catheter Placement in the Cardiac Operating Room

The aim of this study was to use wearable video-recording technology to measure precisely the timing of discrete events during perioperative central venous catheter (CVC) placements. A single-center, observational, exploratory study on the use of wearable video-recording technology during intraopera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia 2024-06, Vol.38 (6), p.1409-1416
Hauptverfasser: Vergara-Escudero, Enrique, Gherciuc, Alexander, Buyck, David, Eid, Aya, Arango, Susana, Richardson, Stephen, Perry, Tjörvi E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this study was to use wearable video-recording technology to measure precisely the timing of discrete events during perioperative central venous catheter (CVC) placements. A single-center, observational, exploratory study on the use of wearable video-recording technology during intraoperative CVC placement. The study was conducted at a University Hospital. Clinical anesthesia residents, cardiothoracic anesthesia fellows, and attending anesthesiologists participated in this study. Participants were asked to use eye-tracking glasses prior to the placement of a CVC in the cardiac operating rooms. No other instruction was given to the participants. The authors measured the total time to complete the CVC placement, phase-specific time, and specific times of interest. They compared these times across 3 training levels and tested differences with analysis of variance. The authors’ findings indicated significant differences in total CVC placement time when the procedure included a pulmonary artery catheter insertion (1,170 ± 364, 923 ± 272, and 596 ± 226 seconds; F2,63 = 12.71, p < 0.0001). Additionally, they found differences in interval times and times of interest. The authors observed a reduction of variability with increasing experience during the CVC placement phase. In this observational study, the study authors describe their experience using first-person wearable video-recording technology to precisely measure the timing of discrete events during CVC placement by anesthesia residents and anesthesiologists. Future work will leverage the eye-tracking capabilities of the existing hardware to identify areas of inefficiency to develop actionable targets for interventions that could improve trainee performance and patient safety.
ISSN:1053-0770
1532-8422
1532-8422
DOI:10.1053/j.jvca.2024.02.038