Comparison of bench test evaluations of surgical skill with live operating performance assessments
Autor: | Ara Darzi, Vivek Datta, Simon Bann, Jonathan Beard, Mirren Mandalia |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Models
Anatomic medicine.medical_specialty business.industry Construct validity Internship and Residency Spearman's rank correlation coefficient Checklist Bench test Competency-Based Education Test (assessment) Global Rating Operating theater General Surgery Task Performance and Analysis medicine Surgical skills Medical Staff Hospital Humans Surgery Medical physics Clinical Competence Educational Measurement business Vascular Surgical Procedures |
Zdroj: | Journal of the American College of Surgeons. 199(4) |
ISSN: | 1072-7515 |
Popis: | Attempts at assessing surgical proficiency have generally used laboratory simulation to evaluate skill. The aim of this study was to compare technical ability as measured on a bench simulation with actual operative performance.Twenty-two general surgeons and trainees were recruited: consultants (n = 4), specialist registrars (n = 14), and senior house officers (n = 4). They were assessed while performing a saphenofemoral dissection on an anesthetized patient in the operating theater, and performing the same procedure on an inanimate model within the laboratory. The Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill method, consisting of a 7-parameter global rating (maximum score 35) and 17-point step-by-step checklist (maximum score 17) was used to measure performance in both environments. Face, content, and construct validity of the synthetic model were established as part of this study.There was a significant relationship between technical skill as measured on the bench test model and performance within the operating theater with respect to both global rating (Spearman correlation coefficient 0.824, p0.001; alpha coefficient 0.89) and checklist ratings (r = 0.514, p0.02; alpha coefficient 0.68) rating assessments. Global rating scores correlated with experience for both operative (r = 0.822, p0.001) and bench (r = 0.515, p0.05) settings. There was no difference in level of measured performance between operating theater and bench model (global rating mean 23.25 +/- 6.66 versus 23.75 +/- 5.62, respectively; paired t-test p = 0.559).Assessment of technical skill using inanimate procedural simulation translates to actual surgical performance within the operating theater. This further validates use of bench test evaluations to measure surgical technical ability. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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