Small Glove Size and Female Gender Are Associated with Greater Reported Difficulty Using Orthopaedic Instruments Among Residents.

IF 2.3 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS JBJS Open Access Pub Date : 2024-05-22 eCollection Date: 2024-04-01 DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.23.00151
Benjamin Lurie, Jessica Albanese, Gayle Allenback, Iain Elliott, Karen Nelson
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Abstract

Introduction: Smaller hand size has been shown to affect ease of instrument use and surgeon injury rates in multiple surgical subspecialties. Women have a smaller average hand size and are more often affected by this issue than men. The goal of this resident survey was to investigate whether hand size and gender impact self-reported difficulty with instrument use among orthopaedic surgery residents.

Methods: Residents were surveyed about how often they experience difficulty using common orthopaedic instruments. Self-reported difficulty using surgical instruments was compared between residents with small glove (SG, outer ≤7.0) vs. large glove (LG, ≥ 7.5) sizes and between male and female residents.

Results: One hundred forty-five residents (118 males and 27 females) completed the survey for a response rate of 3.7%. The SG group contained 35 residents, with 26 females and 9 males. The LG group contained 110 residents, with 1 female and 109 males. The SG group reported more difficulty than the LG group when using 3/6 instruments: the wire-cutting pliers (71.4% vs. 25.5%), universal T-handle chuck (65.7% vs. 21.4%), and large wire driver (60.0% vs. 24.8%). Female residents reported more difficulty than males for 5/6 instruments. Within the SG group, however, there was no difference in self-reported difficulty between female SG and male SG residents for 4/6 instruments.

Conclusions: The predominantly male LG group reported significantly less difficulty than the more gender mixed though still predominantly female SG group. A subanalysis comparing males and females within the SG group found that there was no difference between SG female and SG male residents for 4/6 of the instruments, suggesting that glove size might impact reported difficulty independently from gender. Although the effect of glove size vs. gender is difficult to differentiate in this study, the high rate of difficulty experienced by male and female residents in the SG group should be considered by residency programs, surgeon educators, and instrument manufacturers as the field of orthopaedic surgery continues to become more diverse.

Level of evidence: III.

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小手套尺寸和女性性别与住院医师使用骨科器械时遇到的更大困难有关。
简介:在多个外科亚专科中,较小的手掌尺寸已被证明会影响器械的易用性和外科医生的受伤率。女性的平均手掌尺寸较小,因此比男性更容易受到这一问题的影响。这项住院医师调查的目的是研究手的大小和性别是否会影响骨科住院医师自我报告的器械使用困难:方法:调查住院医师在使用常见骨科器械时遇到困难的频率。对戴小手套(SG,外侧≤7.0)和戴大手套(LG,≥7.5)的住院医师以及男性和女性住院医师的自我报告使用手术器械的困难程度进行了比较:145 名居民(男性 118 人,女性 27 人)完成了调查,回复率为 3.7%。SG 组有 35 名居民,其中女性 26 人,男性 9 人。LG 组有 110 名居民,其中女性 1 人,男性 109 人。与 LG 组相比,SG 组在使用以下 3/6 种工具时遇到的困难更大:线切割钳(71.4% 对 25.5%)、通用 T 型手柄卡盘(65.7% 对 21.4%)和大型起丝器(60.0% 对 24.8%)。女性住院医师比男性住院医师更难使用 5/6 种器械。然而,在 SG 组中,女性住院医师和男性住院医师对 4/6 种器械的自述难度没有差异:结论:以男性为主的 LG 组所报告的难度明显低于性别更为混合但仍以女性为主的 SG 组。对 SG 组中的男性和女性进行的子分析发现,SG 女性和 SG 男性住院医师在 4/6 项工具上没有差异,这表明手套大小可能会对报告难度产生独立于性别的影响。尽管在本研究中很难区分手套大小对性别的影响,但随着骨科手术领域的不断多样化,住院医师培训项目、外科医生教育者和器械制造商应考虑到 SG 组男女住院医师所经历的高难度率:证据等级:III。
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来源期刊
JBJS Open Access
JBJS Open Access Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6 weeks
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