Back to Search Start Over

Gender differences in the acquisition of suturing skills with the da Vinci surgical system

Authors :
Yiu Shun Tong
Tsorng Harn Fong
Sheng Wei Chang
Po Li Wei
Hsin Yi Chiu
Yi No Kang
Wei Lin Wang
Source :
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association, Vol 119, Iss 1, Pp 462-470 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Background: The percentage of female medical students has been significant elevating worldwide. The demographic shift is expected to influence the proportion of male versus female surgeons soon. The objective of this study was to evaluate the gender differences in the acquisition of robotic suturing skills. Methods: We compared the robotic suturing performance between 39 male and 19 female medical students. We separated the training into two parts: phase I, involving virtual reality (VR) robotic simulation, and phase II, involving robotic dry-laboratory simulation training. Participants first conducted step-by-step exercises on the VR robotic simulator and then the robotic skin-suturing pad using the da Vinci robot. Results: The metric analysis of the VR task “suture sponge” showed that female students required less time (difference: −170.7 seconds, 95% CI: −247.4 to −94.0) and had fewer errors (error difference: −50, 95% CI: −74.2 to −25.8) to complete the suture sponge exercise compared to male students. Moreover, female students completed more stitches than male students (differences in mean stitch achieved: .35; 95% CI: .06 to .65). However, there was no difference in the quality scores of stitches by gender (p = 0.85). Conclusion: Female medical students performed better in the VR task of suture spongy and achieved more stitches than male students with the da Vinci system despite no difference in robotic suture quality by gender. Because this is the first study comparing gender performance on a robotic platform, further studies are required to investigate if different training approaches will affect the performance by gender. Keywords: Robotic surgery, Simulation, Gender difference, Virtual reality, Medical education

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09296646
Volume :
119
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the Formosan Medical Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9056d24396070617741969be44cb062