TY - JOUR
T1 - Objective Assessment of Surgical Technical Skill and Competency in the Operating Room
AU - Vedula, S. Swaroop
AU - Ishii, Masaru
AU - Hager, Gregory D.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/6/21
Y1 - 2017/6/21
N2 - Training skillful and competent surgeons is critical to ensure high quality of care and to minimize disparities in access to effective care. Traditional models to train surgeons are being challenged by rapid advances in technology, an intensified patient-safety culture, and a need for value-driven health systems. Simultaneously, technological developments are enabling capture and analysis of large amounts of complex surgical data. These developments are motivating a "surgical data science" approach to objective computer-aided technical skill evaluation (OCASE-T) for scalable, accurate assessment; individualized feedback; and automated coaching. We define the problem space for OCASE-T and summarize 45 publications representing recent research in this domain. We find that most studies on OCASE-T are simulation based; very few are in the operating room. The algorithms and validation methodologies used for OCASE-T are highly varied; there is no uniform consensus. Future research should emphasize competency assessment in the operating room, validation against patient outcomes, and effectiveness for surgical training.
AB - Training skillful and competent surgeons is critical to ensure high quality of care and to minimize disparities in access to effective care. Traditional models to train surgeons are being challenged by rapid advances in technology, an intensified patient-safety culture, and a need for value-driven health systems. Simultaneously, technological developments are enabling capture and analysis of large amounts of complex surgical data. These developments are motivating a "surgical data science" approach to objective computer-aided technical skill evaluation (OCASE-T) for scalable, accurate assessment; individualized feedback; and automated coaching. We define the problem space for OCASE-T and summarize 45 publications representing recent research in this domain. We find that most studies on OCASE-T are simulation based; very few are in the operating room. The algorithms and validation methodologies used for OCASE-T are highly varied; there is no uniform consensus. Future research should emphasize competency assessment in the operating room, validation against patient outcomes, and effectiveness for surgical training.
KW - OCASE
KW - Objective computer-aided surgical skill evaluation
KW - Objective skill assessment
KW - Surgical data science
KW - Surgical technical competence
KW - Surgical technical skill
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U2 - 10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071516-044435
DO - 10.1146/annurev-bioeng-071516-044435
M3 - Article
C2 - 28375649
AN - SCOPUS:85021149685
SN - 1523-9829
VL - 19
SP - 301
EP - 325
JO - Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering
JF - Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering
ER -