影响新手外科医生模拟手术表现的现实干扰和干扰。

Robin L Feuerbacher, Kenneth H Funk, Donn H Spight, Brian S Diggs, John G Hunter
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引用次数: 73

摘要

虽然手术室干扰和中断(ORDIs)的风险是公认的,但大多数关于这一主题的研究都是不现实的、不确定的或方法上不健全的。我们假设真实的ORDIs会导致新手外科医生在模拟手术过程中出现错误。18名二年级、三年级和研究年度的外科住院医生在腹腔镜虚拟现实模拟器上完成了受试者内部实验。根据9个月的手术室观察,设计了4个干扰和2个中断,并定时发生在模拟腹腔镜胆囊切除术的关键阶段。控制因素是是否存在ORDIs,顺序在受试者之间随机平衡。主要结局指标主要结局指标是由模拟器测量的手术错误,如动脉、胆管或其他器官的损伤。第二个结果测量是参与者是否记得在手术前分配的前瞻性记忆任务,这对手术行为很重要。结果有ORDIs的18例模拟手术中有8例(44%)发生重大手术错误,而无ORDIs的18例模拟手术中只有1例(6%)发生重大手术错误(P = 0.02)。插科打诨的问题导致的错误最多。边栏对话是下一个最有可能导致错误的干扰。18名参与者中有10人(56%)忘记了有ORDI的前瞻记忆任务,而18名参与者中有4人(22%)忘记了没有ORDI的任务(P = 0.04)。8例ORDIs手术错误均发生在下午1点后(P = 0.001)。结论典型的ORDIs有可能引起外科实习生的手术错误。这种表现不足在下午很普遍。
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Realistic distractions and interruptions that impair simulated surgical performance by novice surgeons.

HYPOTHESIS Although the risks for operating room distractions and interruptions (ORDIs) are acknowledged, most research on this topic is unrealistic, inconclusive, or methodologically unsound. We hypothesized that realistic ORDIs induce errors in a simulated surgical procedure performed by novice surgeons. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Eighteen second-year, third-year, and research-year surgical residents completed a within-subjects experiment on a laparoscopic virtual reality simulator. Based on 9 months of operating room observations, 4 distractions and 2 interruptions were designed and timed to occur during critical stages in simulated laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The control factor was the absence or presence of ORDIs, with order randomly counterbalanced across the subjects. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The primary outcome measure was surgical errors measured by the simulator as damage to arteries, bile duct, or other organs. The second outcome measure was whether the participants remembered a prospective memory task assigned prior to the procedure and important to operative conduct. RESULTS Major surgical errors were committed in 8 of 18 simulated procedures (44%) with ORDIs vs only 1 of 18 (6%) without ORDIs (P = .02). Interrupting questions caused the most errors. Sidebar conversations were the next most likely distraction to lead to errors. Ten of 18 participants (56%) forgot the prospective memory task with ORDIs, while 4 of 18 (22%) forgot the task without ORDI (P = .04). All 8 surgical errors with ORDIs occurred after 1 PM (P = .001). CONCLUSIONS Typical ORDIs have the potential to cause operative errors in surgical trainees. This performance deficit was prevalent in the afternoon.

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Archives of Surgery
Archives of Surgery 医学-外科
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