Working volume: validity evidence for a motion-based metric of surgical efficiency

Abstract Background The aim of this study was to evaluate working volume as a potential assessment metric for open surgical tasks. Methods Surgical attendings ( n = 6), residents ( n = 4), and medical students ( n = 5) performed a suturing task on simulated connective tissue (foam), artery (rubber b...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of surgery 2016-02, Vol.211 (2), p.445-450
Hauptverfasser: D'Angelo, Anne-Lise D., M.D, Rutherford, Drew N., M.S, Ray, Rebecca D., Ph.D, Laufer, Shlomi, Ph.D, Mason, Andrea, Ph.D, Pugh, Carla M., M.D., Ph.D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background The aim of this study was to evaluate working volume as a potential assessment metric for open surgical tasks. Methods Surgical attendings ( n = 6), residents ( n = 4), and medical students ( n = 5) performed a suturing task on simulated connective tissue (foam), artery (rubber balloon), and friable tissue (tissue paper). Using a motion tracking system, effective working volume was calculated for each hand. Repeated measures analysis of variance assessed differences in working volume by experience level, dominant and/or nondominant hand, and tissue type. Results Analysis revealed a linear relationship between experience and working volume. Attendings had the smallest working volume, and students had the largest ( P = .01). The 3-way interaction of experience level, hand, and material type showed attendings and residents maintained a similar working volume for dominant and nondominant hands for all tasks. In contrast, medical students' nondominant hand covered larger working volumes for the balloon and tissue paper materials ( P < .05). Conclusions This study provides validity evidence for the use of working volume as a metric for open surgical skills. Working volume may provide a means for assessing surgical efficiency and the operative learning curve.
ISSN:0002-9610
1879-1883
DOI:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2015.10.005