Back to Search Start Over

What is Transferred and How Much is Retained? A Simulation Study of Complex Surgical Skills

Authors :
Claire A. Wilson
Jacob Davidson
Saad Chahine
Ernest Pang Chan
Leandra Stringer
Mackenzie A. Quantz
Donald H. Saklofske
Peter (Zhan Tao) Wang
Source :
The Journal of surgical research. 280
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Studies indicate that learning surgical skills on low-fidelity models is equally beneficial to learning on high-fidelity models in terms of skills retention and transfer. However, it is unclear how low-fidelity simulation training impacts retention and transfer in novice learners, particularly on complex surgical tasks that incorporate multiple challenging skills. This study explores the capacity of complete novices to learn and transfer complex surgical skills from a low-fidelity model to a high-fidelity simulation after a delay.Task-naïve medical and nonmedical undergraduate students (n = 62) participated in a three-phase prospective double-arm randomized (2:1) experimental study. Participants completed two skills training sessions (end-to-side anastomosis) on a low-fidelity bench model. After a 4-week delay, participants completed the task again either using the low-fidelity model or a high-fidelity model (cadaver) and were assessed using a validated checklist.There was a significant time × fidelity group interaction (P = 0.004). Simple effects analysis indicated the high-fidelity group (MThese findings suggest that for novice populations, relying on low-fidelity simulation training as a source of teaching complex skills may not provide a reliable transfer to high-fidelity models and in turn clinical settings.

Details

ISSN :
10958673
Volume :
280
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of surgical research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f7f00c97ca851e835da88504a1389f1b