Attitudes Toward Neurosurgery Education for the Nonneurosurgeon: A Survey Study and Critical Analysis of US Military Training Techniques and Future Prospects

被引:3
作者
Ravindra, Vijay M. [1 ,5 ]
Tadlock, Matthew D. [2 ,3 ,4 ,6 ]
Gurney, Jennifer M. [7 ]
Kraus, Kristin L. [5 ]
Dengler, Bradley A. [8 ]
Gordon, Jennifer [9 ]
Cooke, Jonathon [1 ]
Porensky, Paul [1 ]
Belverud, Shawn [1 ]
Milton, Jason O. [1 ]
Cardoso, Mario [10 ]
Carroll, Christopher P. [10 ]
Tomlin, Jeffrey [10 ]
Champagne, Roland [3 ]
Bell, Randy S. [8 ]
Viers, Angela G. [9 ]
Ikeda, Daniel S. [8 ]
机构
[1] Naval Med Readiness Training Command, Dept Neurosurg, San Diego, CA USA
[2] Naval Med Readiness Training Command, Dept Surg, San Diego, CA USA
[3] Naval Med Readiness Training Command, Bioskills Training Ctr, San Diego, CA USA
[4] Univ Calif San Diego, Dept Neurosurg, San Diego, CA USA
[5] Univ Utah, Dept Neurosurg, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[6] 1st Marine Logist Grp, Med Battal 1, Camp Pendleton, CA USA
[7] US Army Inst Surg Res, Joint Base San Antonio, San Antonio, TX USA
[8] Walter Reed Natl Mil Med Ctr, Dept Neurosurg, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA
[9] US Naval Hosp Okinawa, Dept Surg, Okinawa, Japan
[10] Naval Med Ctr, Dept Brain & Spine Surg, Portsmouth, VA USA
关键词
Austere environment; Craniotomy; Education; Military; Neurosurgery; AUGMENTED REALITY; FEASIBILITY; TRAUMA;
D O I
10.1016/j.wneu.2022.09.033
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
BACKGROUND: The U.S. military requires medical readiness to support forward-deployed combat operations. Because time and distance to neurosurgical capabilities vary within the deployed trauma system, nonneurosurgeons are required to perform emergent cranial procedures in select cases. It is unclear whether these surgeons have sufficient training in these procedures. METHODS: This quality-improvement study involved a voluntary, anonymized specialty-specific survey of activeduty surgeons about their experience and attitudes toward U.S. military emergency neurosurgical training. RESULTS: Survey responses were received from 104 general surgeons and 26 neurosurgeons. Among general surgeons, 81% have deployed and 53% received training in emergency neurosurgical procedures before deployment. Only 16% of general surgeons reported participating in craniotomy/craniectomy procedures in the last year. Nine general surgeons reported performing an emergency neurosurgical procedure while on deployment/humanitarian mission, and 87% of respondents expressed interest in further predeployment emergency neurosurgery training. Among neurosurgeons, 81% had participated in training nonneurosurgeons and 73% believe that more comprehensive training for nonneurosurgeons before deployment is needed. General surgeons proposed lower procedure minimums for competency for external ventricular drain placement and craniotomy/craniectomy than did neurosurgeons. Only 37% of general surgeons had used mixed/augmented reality in any capacity previously; for combat procedures, most (90%) would prefer using synchronous supervision via high-fidelity video teleconferencing over mixed reality. CONCLUSIONS: These survey results show a gap in readiness for neurosurgical procedures for forward deployed general surgeons. Capitalizing on capabilities such as mixed/augmented reality would be a force multiplier and a potential means of improving neurosurgical capabilities in the forward-deployed environments.
引用
收藏
页码:E1335 / E1344
页数:10
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], ADVISOR HELPS FORW D
[2]  
ASSET, ADV SURG SKILLS EXP
[3]   Systematic review on the effectiveness of augmented reality applications in medical training [J].
Barsom, E. Z. ;
Graafland, M. ;
Schijven, M. P. .
SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES, 2016, 30 (10) :4174-4183
[4]  
Bell RS, 2018, EMERGENCY LIFE SAVIN
[5]   Advanced surgical skills for exposure in trauma (ASSET): the first 25 courses [J].
Bowyer, Mark W. ;
Kuhls, Deborah A. ;
Haskin, Danielle ;
Sallee, Richard A. ;
Henry, Sharon M. ;
Garcia, George D. ;
Luchette, Frederick A. .
JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 2013, 183 (02) :553-558
[6]   Survival after traumatic brain injury improves with deployment of neurosurgeons: a comparison of US and UK military treatment facilities during the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts [J].
Breeze, John ;
Bowley, Douglas M. ;
Harrisson, Stuart E. ;
Dye, Justin ;
Neal, Christopher ;
Bell, Randy S. ;
Armonda, Rocco A. ;
Beggs, Andrew D. ;
DuBose, Jospeh ;
Rickard, Rory F. ;
Powers, David Bryan .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 91 (04) :359-365
[7]   Augmented reality-assisted skull base surgery [J].
Cabrilo, I. ;
Sarrafzadeh, A. ;
Bijlenga, P. ;
Landis, B. N. ;
Schaller, K. .
NEUROCHIRURGIE, 2014, 60 (06) :304-306
[8]   Enhancing Reality: A Systematic Review of Augmented Reality in Neuronavigation and Education [J].
Cho, James ;
Rahimpour, Shervin ;
Cutler, Andrew ;
Goodwin, C. Rory ;
Lad, Shivanand P. ;
Codd, Patrick .
WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2020, 139 :186-195
[9]  
Contenttechnologiesinc Contenttechnologiesinc, ABOUT US
[10]   Early Feasibility Studies of Augmented Reality Navigation for Lateral Skull Base Surgery [J].
Creighton, Francis X. ;
Unberath, Mathias ;
Song, Tianyu ;
Zhao, Zhuokai ;
Armand, Mehran ;
Carey, John .
OTOLOGY & NEUROTOLOGY, 2020, 41 (07) :883-888