• Ann Oto Rhinol Laryn · Nov 2007

    Objective assessment of temporal bone drilling skills.

    • Molly Zirkle, Michael A Taplin, Richard Anthony, and Adam Dubrowski.
    • Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Wilson Centre for Research in Clinical Education and Surgical Skills Laboratory, Mt Sinai Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
    • Ann Oto Rhinol Laryn. 2007 Nov 1;116(11):793-8.

    ObjectivesThere is great interest in training surgeons in the technical aspects of their craft through simulation and laboratory-based exercises. However, there are as yet only a few objective tools to assess technical performance in a laboratory setting. This study assesses three potential objective assessment tools for a traditional otolaryngology laboratory exercise, temporal bone drilling.MethodsWe performed a validation study in an academic training program. Nineteen otolaryngology residents performed a cortical mastoidectomy on a cadaveric temporal bone. The participants were divided into two groups, experienced and novice, based on previous temporal bone drilling experience. Performance was rated by two independent, blinded experts using four different assessments, the Global Rating Scale (GRS), the Task-Based Checklist (TBC), the final product analysis (FPA), and expert opinion (EO).ResultsThe interrater reliability for all four assessments was good. Two potential objective assessments, the GRS and the TBC, and the traditional assessment tool of EO, correlated with trainee experience. The FPA, however, did not correlate with trainee experience. A logistic regression analysis of all assessments showed that the TBC correlates with EO.ConclusionsThis study validates EO, the GRS, and the TBC as measures of temporal bone drilling performance. Of these measures, the TBC correlates best with EO according to logistic regression and can be reliably used as an objective assessment of temporal bone drilling.

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