The Effects of Previously Acquired Skills on Sinus Surgery Simulator Performance

Author:

Glaser Aylon Y.123,Hall Charles B.14,Uribe Jose I.S.15,Fried Marvin P.15

Affiliation:

1. Bronx, New York, and Newark, New Jersey

2. Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York

3. Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark

4. Departments of Epidemiology and Population Health, Department of Neurology

5. Otolaryngology, Montefiore Medical Center

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The Endoscopic Sinus Surgery Simulator is currently being studied as a tool for otolaryngology resident training. While examining performance patterns on the simulator, we sought to define any relationships that may exist between students' previously acquired skills and their performance on the simulator. METHODS: Twenty-six medical students were enrolled in our study. After completing their trials, they were asked to complete a 28-item questionnaire. This questionnaire included yes/no questions as well as 10-point Likert scale instruments. RESULTS: Only 4 students did not respond to the questionnaire. Significant contributions to simulator performance were elucidated for a number of previously learned skills, but most were short-lived. For example, experienced video gamers were significantly better at hazard avoidance in the simulator's novice mode ( P = .03), but their advantage dissipated as they advanced to intermediate mode trials. In addition, students' handedness contributed to simulator performance for only the first 3 trials ( P = .04), but this relationship, too, was no longer statistically significant in later trials. CONCLUSIONS: Some study students had skills and characteristics that significantly aided them in their ability to perform surgery on the simulator. However, these benefits were short-lived, and these results suggest that practicing plays a more important and long-standing role than other factors in surgical simulator performance. It follows that surgical simulation should play a more prominent role in surgical education because residents who practice on simulators such as this are, in turn, practicing for the reality of the operating room.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

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