Abstract

BackgroundThe ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the surgical training of residents. There is a real concern that trainees will not be able to meet their training requirements. Low-fidelity surgical simulation appears to be an alternative for surgical training. The educational benefits of repeating ossiculoplasty simulations under a microscope have never been evaluated. With this study we aimed to evaluate the differences in performance scores and on a global rating scale before and after training on an ossiculoplasty simulator.MethodsIn this quasi-experimental, prospective, single-centre, before-after study with blinded rater evaluation, residents performed five microscopic ossiculoplasty tasks with a difficulty gradient (sliding beads onto rods, the insertion of a partial prosthesis, the insertion of a total prosthesis, and the insertion of a stapedotomy piston under microscopic or endoscopic surgery) before and after training on the same simulator. Performance scores were defined for each task, and total performance scores (score/min) were calculated. All data were collected prospectively.ResultsSix out of seven intermediate residents and 8/9 novices strongly agreed that the simulator was an effective training device and should be included in the ENT residency program. The mean effect of training was a significant increase in the total performance score (+ 0.52 points/min, [95 % CI, 0.40–0.64], p < 0.001), without a significant difference between novice and intermediate residents.ConclusionsThis preliminary study shows that techniques for middle-ear surgery can be acquired using a simulator, avoiding any risk for patients, even under lockdown measures.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn demanding surgical specialities that involve acquisition of procedural skills

  • The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the surgical training of residents [1]

  • There is a real concern that trainees will not be able to meet their training requirements and the long-term impact of suspending training indefinitely is a severe disruption of essential medical services

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Summary

Introduction

In demanding surgical specialities that involve acquisition of procedural skills. There is a real concern that trainees will not be able to meet their training requirements and the long-term impact of suspending training indefinitely is a severe disruption of essential medical services. DP and ML both improve performance across a variety of disciplines, including sports and music, and there is growing evidence of their effectiveness within medical education and surgical skills [4, 8]. There is a real concern that trainees will not be able to meet their training requirements. The educational benefits of repeating ossiculoplasty simulations under a microscope have never been evaluated. With this study we aimed to evaluate the differences in performance scores and on a global rating scale before and after training on an ossiculoplasty simulator

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