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Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study

BACKGROUND: The demand for regional anesthesia for major surgery has increased considerably, but only a small number of anesthesiologists can provide such care. Simulations may improve clinical performance. However, opportunities to rehearse procedures are limited, and the clinical educational outco...

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Autores principales: McLeod, Graeme, McKendrick, Mel, Tafili, Tedis, Obregon, Mateo, Neary, Ruth, Mustafa, Ayman, Raju, Pavan, Kean, Donna, McKendrick, Gary, McKendrick, Tuesday
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9412904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35543314
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32840
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author McLeod, Graeme
McKendrick, Mel
Tafili, Tedis
Obregon, Mateo
Neary, Ruth
Mustafa, Ayman
Raju, Pavan
Kean, Donna
McKendrick, Gary
McKendrick, Tuesday
author_facet McLeod, Graeme
McKendrick, Mel
Tafili, Tedis
Obregon, Mateo
Neary, Ruth
Mustafa, Ayman
Raju, Pavan
Kean, Donna
McKendrick, Gary
McKendrick, Tuesday
author_sort McLeod, Graeme
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The demand for regional anesthesia for major surgery has increased considerably, but only a small number of anesthesiologists can provide such care. Simulations may improve clinical performance. However, opportunities to rehearse procedures are limited, and the clinical educational outcomes prescribed by the Royal College of Anesthesiologists training curriculum 2021 are difficult to attain. Educational paradigms, such as mastery learning and dedicated practice, are increasingly being used to teach technical skills to enhance skills acquisition. Moreover, high-fidelity, resilient cadaver simulators are now available: the soft embalmed Thiel cadaver shows physical characteristics and functional alignment similar to those of patients. Tissue elasticity allows tissues to expand and relax, fluid to drain away, and hundreds of repeated injections to be tolerated without causing damage. Learning curves and their intra- and interindividual dynamics have not hitherto been measured on the Thiel cadaver simulator using the mastery learning and dedicated practice educational paradigm coupled with validated, quantitative metrics, such as checklists, eye tracking metrics, and self-rating scores. OBJECTIVE: Our primary objective was to measure the learning slopes of the scanning and needling phases of an interscalene block conducted repeatedly on a soft embalmed Thiel cadaver over a 3-hour period of training. METHODS: A total of 30 anesthesiologists, with a wide range of experience, conducted up to 60 ultrasound-guided interscalene blocks over 3 hours on the left side of 2 soft embalmed Thiel cadavers. The duration of the scanning and needling phases was defined as the time taken to perform all the steps correctly. The primary outcome was the best-fit linear slope of the log-log transformed time to complete each phase. Our secondary objectives were to measure preprocedural psychometrics, describe deviations from the learning slope, correlate scanning and needling phase data, characterize skills according to clinical grade, measure learning curves using objective eye gaze tracking and subjective self-rating measures, and use cluster analysis to categorize performance irrespective of grade. RESULTS: The median (IQR; range) log-log learning slopes were −0.47 (−0.62 to −0.32; −0.96 to 0.30) and −0.23 (−0.34 to −0.19; −0.71 to 0.27) during the scanning and needling phases, respectively. Locally Weighted Scatterplot Smoother curves showed wide variability in within-participant performance. The learning slopes of the scanning and needling phases correlated: ρ=0.55 (0.23-0.76), P<.001, and ρ=−0.72 (−0.46 to −0.87), P<.001, respectively. Eye gaze fixation count and glance count during the scanning and needling phases best reflected block duration. Using clustering techniques, fixation count and glance were used to identify 4 distinct patterns of learning behavior. CONCLUSIONS: We quantified learning slopes by log-log transformation of the time taken to complete the scanning and needling phases of interscalene blocks and identified intraindividual and interindividual patterns of variability.
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spelling pubmed-94129042022-08-27 Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study McLeod, Graeme McKendrick, Mel Tafili, Tedis Obregon, Mateo Neary, Ruth Mustafa, Ayman Raju, Pavan Kean, Donna McKendrick, Gary McKendrick, Tuesday JMIR Med Educ Original Paper BACKGROUND: The demand for regional anesthesia for major surgery has increased considerably, but only a small number of anesthesiologists can provide such care. Simulations may improve clinical performance. However, opportunities to rehearse procedures are limited, and the clinical educational outcomes prescribed by the Royal College of Anesthesiologists training curriculum 2021 are difficult to attain. Educational paradigms, such as mastery learning and dedicated practice, are increasingly being used to teach technical skills to enhance skills acquisition. Moreover, high-fidelity, resilient cadaver simulators are now available: the soft embalmed Thiel cadaver shows physical characteristics and functional alignment similar to those of patients. Tissue elasticity allows tissues to expand and relax, fluid to drain away, and hundreds of repeated injections to be tolerated without causing damage. Learning curves and their intra- and interindividual dynamics have not hitherto been measured on the Thiel cadaver simulator using the mastery learning and dedicated practice educational paradigm coupled with validated, quantitative metrics, such as checklists, eye tracking metrics, and self-rating scores. OBJECTIVE: Our primary objective was to measure the learning slopes of the scanning and needling phases of an interscalene block conducted repeatedly on a soft embalmed Thiel cadaver over a 3-hour period of training. METHODS: A total of 30 anesthesiologists, with a wide range of experience, conducted up to 60 ultrasound-guided interscalene blocks over 3 hours on the left side of 2 soft embalmed Thiel cadavers. The duration of the scanning and needling phases was defined as the time taken to perform all the steps correctly. The primary outcome was the best-fit linear slope of the log-log transformed time to complete each phase. Our secondary objectives were to measure preprocedural psychometrics, describe deviations from the learning slope, correlate scanning and needling phase data, characterize skills according to clinical grade, measure learning curves using objective eye gaze tracking and subjective self-rating measures, and use cluster analysis to categorize performance irrespective of grade. RESULTS: The median (IQR; range) log-log learning slopes were −0.47 (−0.62 to −0.32; −0.96 to 0.30) and −0.23 (−0.34 to −0.19; −0.71 to 0.27) during the scanning and needling phases, respectively. Locally Weighted Scatterplot Smoother curves showed wide variability in within-participant performance. The learning slopes of the scanning and needling phases correlated: ρ=0.55 (0.23-0.76), P<.001, and ρ=−0.72 (−0.46 to −0.87), P<.001, respectively. Eye gaze fixation count and glance count during the scanning and needling phases best reflected block duration. Using clustering techniques, fixation count and glance were used to identify 4 distinct patterns of learning behavior. CONCLUSIONS: We quantified learning slopes by log-log transformation of the time taken to complete the scanning and needling phases of interscalene blocks and identified intraindividual and interindividual patterns of variability. JMIR Publications 2022-08-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9412904/ /pubmed/35543314 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32840 Text en ©Graeme McLeod, Mel McKendrick, Tedis Tafili, Mateo Obregon, Ruth Neary, Ayman Mustafa, Pavan Raju, Donna Kean, Gary McKendrick, Tuesday McKendrick. Originally published in JMIR Medical Education (https://mededu.jmir.org), 11.08.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Medical Education, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mededu.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
McLeod, Graeme
McKendrick, Mel
Tafili, Tedis
Obregon, Mateo
Neary, Ruth
Mustafa, Ayman
Raju, Pavan
Kean, Donna
McKendrick, Gary
McKendrick, Tuesday
Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title_full Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title_fullStr Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title_short Patterns of Skills Acquisition in Anesthesiologists During Simulated Interscalene Block Training on a Soft Embalmed Thiel Cadaver: Cohort Study
title_sort patterns of skills acquisition in anesthesiologists during simulated interscalene block training on a soft embalmed thiel cadaver: cohort study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9412904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35543314
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32840
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