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Virtual Reality Training Improves Operating Room PerformanceResults of a Randomized, Double-Blinded Study

 

作者: Neal Seymour,   Anthony Gallagher,   Sanziana Roman,   Michael O’Brien,   Vipin Bansal,   Dana Andersen,   Richard Satava,  

 

期刊: Annals of Surgery  (OVID Available online 2002)
卷期: Volume 236, issue 4  

页码: 458-464

 

ISSN:0003-4932

 

年代: 2002

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo demonstrate that virtual reality (VR) training transfers technical skills to the operating room (OR) environment.Summary Background DataThe use of VR surgical simulation to train skills and reduce error risk in the OR has never been demonstrated in a prospective, randomized, blinded study.MethodsSixteen surgical residents (PGY 1–4) had baseline psychomotor abilities assessed, then were randomized to either VR training (MIST VR simulator diathermy task) until expert criterion levels established by experienced laparoscopists were achieved (n = 8), or control non-VR-trained (n = 8). All subjects performed laparoscopic cholecystectomy with an attending surgeon blinded to training status. Videotapes of gallbladder dissection were reviewed independently by two investigators blinded to subject identity and training, and scored for eight predefined errors for each procedure minute (interrater reliability of error assessmentr> 0.80).ResultsNo differences in baseline assessments were found between groups. Gallbladder dissection was 29% faster for VR-trained residents. Non-VR-trained residents were nine times more likely to transiently fail to make progress (P< .007, Mann-Whitney test) and five times more likely to injure the gallbladder or burn nontarget tissue (chi-square = 4.27,P< .04). Mean errors were six times less likely to occur in the VR-trained group (1.19 vs. 7.38 errors per case;P< .008, Mann-Whitney test).ConclusionsThe use of VR surgical simulation to reach specific target criteria significantly improved the OR performance of residents during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This validation of transfer of training skills from VR to OR sets the stage for more sophisticated uses of VR in assessment, training, error reduction, and certification of surgeons.

 

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