Published February 12, 2019
| Version v1
Dataset
Open
Data from: Are multiple views superior to a single view when teaching hip surgery? a single-blinded randomized controlled trial of technical skill acquisition
Creators
- 1. Charing Cross Hospital
Description
Purpose: Surgical education videos currently all use a single point of view (POV) with the trainee locked onto a fixed viewpoint, which may not deliver sufficient information for complex procedures. We developed a novel multiple POV video system and evaluated its training outcome compared with traditional single POV.
Methods: We filmed a hip resurfacing procedure performed by an expert attending using 8 cameras in theatre. 30 medical students were randomly and equally allocated to learn the procedure using the multiple POV (experiment group [EG]) versus single POV system (control group [CG]).
Participants advanced a pin into the femoral head as demonstrated in the video. We measured the drilling trajectories and compared it with pre-operative plan to evaluate distance of the pin insertion and angular deviations. Two orthopedic attendings expertly evaluated the participants' performance using a modified global rating scale (GRS). There was a pre-video knowledge test that was repeated post-simulation alongside a Likert-scale questionnaire.
Results: The angular deviation of the pin in EG was significantly less by 29% compared to CG (p=0.037), with no significant difference in the entry point's distance between groups (p=0.204). The GRS scores for EG were higher than CG (p=0.046). There was a 32% higher overall knowledge test score (p<0.001) and 21% improved Likert-scale questionnaire score (p=0.002) after video-learning in EG than CG, albeit no significant difference in the knowledge test score before video-learning (p=0.721).
Conclusion: The novel multiple POV provided significant objective and subjective advantages over single POV for acquisition of technical skills in hip surgery.
Notes
Files
drybone_cam1.mp4
Files
(3.3 GB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:94c752197a7292ed3c7de61e33384542
|
147.1 MB | Preview Download |
md5:610e0b2a21ff9f0d133f9e59e40fad5a
|
129.2 MB | Preview Download |
md5:99d4b14ca0d2e0431b7ef691540564de
|
348.0 MB | Preview Download |
md5:258c83edaf50d4504442f2ed6632e51a
|
149.2 MB | Preview Download |
md5:3b05395955cccb15ff48dadc7a52d9c9
|
135.4 MB | Preview Download |
md5:1ef0f49f350e463ccafd5cae42fd69df
|
144.6 MB | Preview Download |
md5:d4fc38619c5803822b61dc158585a5e0
|
200.1 MB | Preview Download |
md5:c3e2f9f728e099168dbf6838793e2bbc
|
720 Bytes | Preview Download |
md5:9b37acb8fa462d5c307e991576bb72ee
|
198.9 MB | Preview Download |
md5:c4b16709b8a52dd47230df432ec1d67a
|
241.4 MB | Preview Download |
md5:902445bddf5885348aab92b44c0b24af
|
428.1 MB | Preview Download |
md5:b96c3984d0ca0678129b4456c67eccc7
|
212.7 MB | Preview Download |
md5:dc89b43af3f2b3a6a74fcc6e57f8fa5d
|
169.6 MB | Preview Download |
md5:85e5dc782bc34cc357e9a420c4c59de1
|
206.8 MB | Preview Download |
md5:7f426bae39c86faff2376dc60c9c8c12
|
347.9 MB | Preview Download |
md5:cdb1499352fb1ea1888976f4a2c0a808
|
223.3 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Related works
- Is cited by
- 10.1371/journal.pone.0209904 (DOI)