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Published in: Surgical Endoscopy 5/2013

Open Access 01-05-2013

Multimedia-based training on Internet platforms improves surgical performance: a randomized controlled trial

Authors: Carolina Pape-Koehler, Marc Immenroth, Stefan Sauerland, Rolf Lefering, Cornelia Lindlohr, Jens Toaspern, Markus Heiss

Published in: Surgical Endoscopy | Issue 5/2013

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Abstract

Background

Surgical procedures are complex motion sequences that require a high level of preparation, training, and concentration. In recent years, Internet platforms providing surgical content have been established. Used as a surgical training method, the effect of multimedia-based training on practical surgical skills has not yet been evaluated. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of multimedia-based training on surgical performance.

Methods

A 2 × 2 factorial, randomized controlled trial with a pre- and posttest design was used to test the effect of multimedia-based training in addition to or without practical training on 70 participants in four groups defined by the intervention used: multimedia-based training, practical training, and combination training (multimedia-based training + practical training) or no training (control group). The pre- and posttest consisted of a laparoscopic cholecystectomy in a Pelvi-Trainer and was video recorded, encoded, and saved on DVDs. These were evaluated by blinded raters using a modified objective structured assessment of technical skills (OSATS). The main evaluation criterion was the difference in OSATS score between the pre- and posttest (ΔOSATS) results in terms of a task-specific checklist (procedural steps scored as correct or incorrect).

Results

The groups were homogeneous in terms of demographic parameters, surgical experience, and pretest OSATS scores. The ΔOSATS results were highest in the multimedia-based training group (4.7 ± 3.3; p < 0.001). The practical training group achieved 2.5 ± 4.3 (p = 0.028), whereas the combination training group achieved 4.6 ± 3.5 (p < 0.001), and the control group achieved 0.8 ± 2.9 (p = 0.294).

Conclusion

Multimedia-based training improved surgical performance significantly and thus could be considered a reasonable tool for inclusion in surgical curricula.
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Metadata
Title
Multimedia-based training on Internet platforms improves surgical performance: a randomized controlled trial
Authors
Carolina Pape-Koehler
Marc Immenroth
Stefan Sauerland
Rolf Lefering
Cornelia Lindlohr
Jens Toaspern
Markus Heiss
Publication date
01-05-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Surgical Endoscopy / Issue 5/2013
Print ISSN: 0930-2794
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2218
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-012-2672-y

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