Utilising an accelerated Delphi process to develop consensus on the requirement and components of a pre-procedural core robotic surgery curriculum

被引:0
作者
Joshua Richard Burke
Christina A. Fleming
Martin King
Charlotte El-Sayed
William S. Bolton
Chris Munsch
Deena Harji
Simon P. Bach
Justin W. Collins
机构
[1] The Association of Surgeons in Training,Robotics and Digital Surgery Initiative
[2] Royal College of Surgeons of England,Leeds Institute Medical Research
[3] Royal College of Surgeons of England,Academic Department of Surgery
[4] University of Leeds,Department of Colorectal Surgery
[5] The Royal College of Surgeons,undefined
[6] Craigavon Area Hospital,undefined
[7] Technology Enhanced Learning Directorate of Innovation,undefined
[8] Digital and Transformation,undefined
[9] Health Education England,undefined
[10] University of Birmingham,undefined
[11] Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
[12] University College London,undefined
[13] Division of Surgery and Interventional Science,undefined
[14] Research Department of Targeted Intervention,undefined
[15] Wellcome/ESPRC Centre for Interventional and Surgical Sciences (WEISS),undefined
[16] UK,undefined
[17] University College London,undefined
来源
Journal of Robotic Surgery | 2023年 / 17卷
关键词
Robotic surgery; Robot-assisted surgery; Training; Curriculum; Delphi method;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Robot-assisted surgery (RAS) continues to grow globally. Despite this, in the UK and Ireland, it is estimated that over 70% of surgical trainees across all specialities have no access to robot-assisted surgical training (RAST). This study aimed to provide educational stakeholders guidance on a pre-procedural core robotic surgery curriculum (PPCRC) from the perspective of the end user; the surgical trainee. The study was conducted in four Phases: P1: a steering group was formed to review current literature and summarise the evidence, P2: Pan-Specialty Trainee Panel Virtual Classroom Discussion, P3: Accelerated Delphi Process and P4: Formulation of Recommendations. Forty-three surgeons in training representing all surgical specialties and training levels contributed to the three round Delphi process. Additions to the second- and third-round surveys were formulated based on the answers and comments from previous rounds. Consensus opinion was defined as ≥ 80% agreement. There was 100% response from all three rounds. The resulting formulated guidance showed good internal consistency, with a Cronbach alpha of > 0.8. There was 97.7% agreement that a standardised PPCRC would be advantageous to training and that, independent of speciality, there should be a common approach (95.5% agreement). Consensus was reached in multiple areas: 1. Experience and Exposure, 2. Access and context, 3. Curriculum Components, 4 Target Groups and Delivery, 5. Objective Metrics, Benchmarking and Assessment. Using the Delphi methodology, we achieved multispecialty consensus among trainees to develop and reach content validation for the requirements and components of a PPCRC. This guidance will benefit from further validation following implementation.
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页码:1443 / 1455
页数:12
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