Abstract

Declining vaginal hysterectomy numbers in obstetrics and gynecology training programs highlights the need for innovative methods to teach vaginal surgical skills. We describe our experience with a vaginal hysterectomy skills simulation curriculum. A low-fidelity bench model was constructed to simulate four vaginal hysterectomy suturing tasks. A polyvinyl chloride downspout adapter and low-cost materials simulate the Heaney pedicle stitch, simple pedicle stitch, double ligature, and continuous running stitch. Faculty expert vaginal surgeons established proficiency levels for each task. Resident (N=30) pass rates for tasks 1, 2, and 3 were 1 of 30 (3.3%), 7 of 30 (23.3%), and 4 of 30 (13.3%), respectively, for the left side, and 3 of 30 (10%), 9 of 30 (30%), and 10 of 30 (33.3%), respectively, for the right side. For task 4, the pass rate was 14 of 30 (46.7%). The majority of residents felt that the model simulates the technical skills required for vaginal hysterectomy and agreed that vaginal skills laboratory training would improve their ability to perform procedures in the operating room. Ninety-two percent of residents felt that a vaginal surgery skills curriculum would be a useful addition to their simulation education. A proficiency-based vaginal hysterectomy skills simulation curriculum using a low-fidelity model may be an important training and evaluation tool for vaginal surgical skills training.

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