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Randomized Controlled Trial
The efficacy of laparoscopic skills training in a Mobile Simulation Unit compared with a fixed site: a comparative study.
- Vicki Xafis, Wendy Babidge, John Field, Meryl Altree, Nicholas Marlow, and Guy Maddern.
- Research, Audit, and Academic Surgery Division, Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, 199 Ward Street, North Adelaide, SA, Australia.
- Surg Endosc. 2013 Jul 1;27(7):2606-12.
BackgroundLaparoscopic skills development via simulation-based medical education programs has gained support in recent years. However, the impact of training site type on skills acquisition has not been examined. The objective of this research was to determine whether laparoscopic skills training outcomes differ as a result of training in a Mobile Simulation Unit (MSU) compared with fixed simulation laboratories.MethodsAn MSU was developed to provide delivery of training. Fixed-site and MSU laparoscopic skills training outcomes data were compared. Fixed-site participants from three Australian states were pooled to create a cohort of 144 participants, which was compared with a cohort derived from pooled MSU participants in one Australian state. Data were sourced from training periods held from October 2009 to December 2010. LapSim and Fundamentals of laparoscopic surgery (FLS) simulators were used at the MSU and fixed sites. Participants self-reported on demographic and experience variables. They trained to a level of competence on one simulator and were assessed on the other simulator, thus producing crossover scores. No participants trained at both site types.ResultsWhen FLS-trained participants were assessed on LapSim, those who received MSU training achieved a significantly higher crossover score than their fixed-site counterparts (p < 0.001). Compared with baseline data, MSU LapSim-trained participants assessed on FLS displayed a performance increase of 23.1 %, whereas MSU FLS-trained participants assessed on LapSim demonstrated a 12.4 % increase in performance skills. Participants at fixed sites displayed performance increases of 5.2 and 10.9 %, respectively.ConclusionsMobile Simulation Unit-delivered laparoscopic simulation training is not inferior to fixed-site training.
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