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The negative effect of distraction on performance of robot-assisted surgical skills in medical students and residents

✍ Scribed by Irene H. Suh; Jung-Hung Chien; Mukul Mukherjee; Shi-Hyun Park; Dmitry Oleynikov; Ka-Chun Siu


Publisher
Wiley (Robotic Publications)
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
127 KB
Volume
6
Category
Article
ISSN
1478-5951

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Modern surgical practice often requires multitasking in operating rooms, generally full of distractions. The purpose of this research was to investigate the effect of distraction on robot‐assisted surgical skill performance in medical students and residents.

Methods

Fourteen subjects performed a suture‐tying task with the da Vinci^™^ surgical system with distractive secondary tasks simultaneously. The time to task completion, speed and the total distance travelled were analysed. Two‐way repeated‐measures ANOVA were applied. The scores of secondary tasks were analysed.

Results

A significant secondary task effect was found with an increase of the time to task completion (p = 0.003) and decreased average speed (p < 0.001). The performance of secondary task for residents was significantly better than students.

Conclusions

The performance of a robot‐assisted surgical task was negatively affected by secondary tasks. However, residents with more surgical experience demonstrated a larger attention capacity for multitasking. Therefore, understanding how medical trainees respond to the distractive secondary tasks while performing robot‐assisted surgical task is important in developing a surgical training programme based on the concept of attention. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.