Simulation in the early management of gastroschisis.

2013 
AIM: Our aim was to design, create, and validate a simulator model and simulation scenario for the early management of gastroschisis. METHODS: Candidates of varying surgical experience had 1 attempt on an abdominal wall defect simulator and were scored for 4 different aspects: resuscitation of the neonate, application of a silo by both a global rating scale and a procedure-specific checklist, and nontechnical skills (scored by Non-Technical Skills scale). Surgical trainees subsequently received a focused teaching module on the resuscitative management and the surgical decision-making process, including bowel protection methods. Trainees then had a second attempt, which was objectively analyzed for improvement. RESULTS: Candidates attempted the simulation and were assessed, looking for construct validity. There was a statistically significant difference between candidate experience levels for all aspects of the simulation (resuscitation, global rating scale, procedure-specific checklist, and nontechnical skills) calculated using analysis of variance. Feedback forms gave us face validity, with a mean adjusted score of 8.3/10 for realism. After teaching the module, there was a statistically significant improvement (P < 0.05) of 20% for technical skills and 10% for nontechnical skills, which is comparable with similar controlled studies. CONCLUSIONS: We showed that creating and running a simulation scenario for the early management of gastroschisis is a feasible and useful tool for training and assessment. The simulation may also be able to discriminate between experience levels and could be used as a teaching aid to improve a surgeon's technical and nontechnical skills.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    21
    References
    8
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []