AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to assess the introduction of a neurosurgery simulation curriculum designed to enhance both basic and advanced skills for residents.
  • The curriculum included 68 core exercises with a combination of cadaver dissections, physical simulations, and computerized training, where junior residents showed a significant improvement in proficiency (82%) compared to senior residents (42.5%).
  • The implementation proved to be effective and beneficial across all levels of training, with cadaver simulations being the most impactful, suggesting that various simulation methods play important roles in resident education.

Article Abstract

Background: The effort required to introduce simulation in neurosurgery academic programs and the benefits perceived by residents have not been systematically assessed.

Objective: To create a neurosurgery simulation curriculum encompassing basic and advanced skills, cadaveric dissection, cranial and spine surgery simulation, and endovascular and computerized haptic training.

Methods: A curriculum with 68 core exercises per academic year was distributed in individualized sets of 30 simulations to 6 neurosurgery residents. The total number of procedures completed during the academic year was set to 180. The curriculum includes 79 simulations with physical models, 57 cadaver dissections, and 44 haptic/computerized sessions. Likert-type evaluations regarding self-perceived performance were completed after each exercise. Subject identification was blinded to junior (postgraduate years 1-3) or senior resident (postgraduate years 4-6). Wilcoxon rank testing was used to detect differences within and between groups.

Results: One hundred eighty procedures and surveys were analyzed. Junior residents reported proficiency improvements in 82% of simulations performed (P < .001). Senior residents reported improvement in 42.5% of simulations (P < .001). Cadaver simulations accrued the highest reported benefit (71.5%; P < .001), followed by physical simulators (63.8%; P < .001) and haptic/computerized (59.1; P < .001). Initial cost is $341,978.00, with $27,876.36 for annual operational expenses.

Conclusion: The systematic implementation of a simulation curriculum in a neurosurgery training program is feasible, is favorably regarded, and has a positive impact on trainees of all levels, particularly in junior years. All simulation forms, cadaver, physical, and haptic/computerized, have a role in different stages of learning and should be considered in the development of an educational simulation program.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/NEU.0000000000000102DOI Listing

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