Erschienen in:
01.09.2015
Simulation-based ureteroscopy skills training curriculum with integration of technical and non-technical skills: a randomised controlled trial
verfasst von:
Oliver Brunckhorst, Shahab Shahid, Abdullatif Aydin, Craig McIlhenny, Shahid Khan, Syed Johar Raza, Arun Sahai, James Brewin, Fernando Bello, Roger Kneebone, Muhammad Shamim Khan, Prokar Dasgupta, Kamran Ahmed
Erschienen in:
Surgical Endoscopy
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Ausgabe 9/2015
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Abstract
Background
Current training modalities within ureteroscopy have been extensively validated and must now be integrated within a comprehensive curriculum. Additionally, non-technical skills often cause surgical error and little research has been conducted to combine this with technical skills teaching. This study therefore aimed to develop and validate a curriculum for semi-rigid ureteroscopy, integrating both technical and non-technical skills teaching within the programme.
Methods
Delphi methodology was utilised for curriculum development and content validation, with a randomised trial then conducted (n = 32) for curriculum evaluation. The developed curriculum consisted of four modules; initially developing basic technical skills and subsequently integrating non-technical skills teaching. Sixteen participants underwent the simulation-based curriculum and were subsequently assessed, together with the control cohort (n = 16) within a full immersion environment. Both technical (Time to completion, OSATS and a task specific checklist) and non-technical (NOTSS) outcome measures were recorded with parametric and non-parametric analyses used depending on the distribution of our data as evaluated by a Shapiro–Wilk test.
Results
Improvements within the intervention cohort demonstrated educational value across all technical and non-technical parameters recorded, including time to completion (p < 0.01), OSATS scores (p < 0.001), task specific checklist scores (p = 0.011) and NOTSS scores (p < 0.001). Content validity, feasibility and acceptability were all demonstrated through curriculum development and post-study questionnaire results.
Conclusions
The current developed curriculum demonstrates that integrating both technical and non-technical skills teaching is both educationally valuable and feasible. Additionally, the curriculum offers a validated simulation-based training modality within ureteroscopy and a framework for the development of other simulation-based programmes.