From the simulation center to the bedside: Validating the efficacy of a dynamic haptic robotic trainer in internal jugular central venous catheter placement

The objective of this study was to validate the transfer of ultrasound-guided Internal Jugular Central Venous Catheterization (US-IJCVC) placement skills from training on a Dynamic Haptic Robotic Trainer (DHRT), to placing US-IJCVCs in clinical environments. DHRT training greatly reduces preceptor t...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of surgery 2020-02, Vol.219 (2), p.379-384
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Hong-En, Sonntag, Cheyenne C., Mirkin, Katelin A., Pepley, David F., Han, David C., Moore, Jason Z., Miller, Scarlett R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The objective of this study was to validate the transfer of ultrasound-guided Internal Jugular Central Venous Catheterization (US-IJCVC) placement skills from training on a Dynamic Haptic Robotic Trainer (DHRT), to placing US-IJCVCs in clinical environments. DHRT training greatly reduces preceptor time by providing automated feedback, standardizes learning experiences, and quantifies skill improvements. Expert observers evaluated DHRT-trained (N = 21) and manikin-trained (N = 36) surgical residents on US-IJCVC placement in the operating suite using a US-IJCVC evaluation form. Performance and errors by DHRT-trained residents were compared to traditional manikin-trained residents. There were no significant training group differences between unsuccessful insertions (p = 0.404), assistance on procedure (p = 0.102), arterial puncture (p = 0.998), and average number of insertion attempts (p = 0.878). Regardless of training group, previous central line experience significantly predicted whether residents needed assistance on the procedure (p = 0.033). The results failed to show a statistical difference between DHRT- and manikin-trained residents. This study validates the transfer of skills from training on the DHRT system to performing US-IJCVC in clinical environments. •DHRT-trained residents perform US-IJCVC as well as manikin-trained residents in clinical environments.•Validation of transfer of US-IJCVC skills from training to bedside.•Previous central line experience predicts residents need for procedural assistance on US-IJCVC.
ISSN:0002-9610
1879-1883
DOI:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2019.10.026