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Clinical Trial Summary

The use of instructional technical surgical videos is common in orthopaedic education. Many residents have used instructional technical surgical training videos prior to medical school, as well as during their residency program, and at instructional courses. The use of instructional technical surgical videos and multimedia is considered an adjunctive training method for orthopaedic residents to learn operative procedures. Immersive virtual reality (iVR) is increasingly used in surgical education. Recently, iVR has shown transfer of skill training in orthopaedics. The continued study of the effectiveness of iVR training in orthopaedic education could benefit new competency based orthopaedics residency programs. The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of instructional technical surgical video training to immersive iVR training for teaching technical skills of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty. Our hypothesis was that iVR improved learning effectiveness compared to standard technical surgical video. Secondary objectives include validating a virtual reality ratings scale through correlation to real-world performance. We proposed a randomized, blinded intervention-control trial directly comparing immersive iVR versus technical surgical instructional video training in the teaching of reverse shoulder arthroplasty in senior residents, learning at the 2020 annual Canadian Shoulder and Elbow Society meeting.


Clinical Trial Description

The use of instructional technical surgical videos is common in orthopaedic education. Many residents have used instructional technical surgical training videos prior to medical school, as well as during their residency program, and at instructional courses. The use of instructional technical surgical videos and multimedia is considered an adjunctive training method for orthopaedic residents to learn operative procedures. Immersive virtual reality (iVR) is increasingly used in surgical education. Recently, iVR has shown transfer of skill training in orthopaedics. The continued study of the effectiveness of iVR training in orthopaedic education could benefit new competency based orthopaedics residency programs. The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of instructional technical surgical video training to immersive iVR training for teaching technical skills of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty. Our hypothesis was that iVR improved learning effectiveness compared to standard technical surgical video. Secondary objectives include validating a virtual reality ratings scale through correlation to real-world performance, and to determine efficiency of learning in both groups. Currently, technical surgical instructional videos are pervasive in orthopaedic teaching education. Immersive VR, another form of teaching, is increasingly being used in surgical education. The production of an immersive VR suite with tactile and user metric feedback may be an advance over current bench top simulator technology, allowing for greater immersion and interaction, leading to better understanding of surgical planning and implementation. The development of this technology could provide trainees with immersive levels of training not previously seen, with improved learning of technical skills over media such as manufacturer technical documents. The effectiveness of training and efficiency of training of the novel immersive VR training systems need to be evaluated as they are increasingly incorporated into competency based, contemporary residency education. We proposed a randomized, blinded intervention-control trial directly comparing immersive iVR versus technical surgical instructional video training in the teaching of reverse shoulder arthroplasty in senior (fourth and fifth year) residents, learning at the 2020 annual Canadian Shoulder and Elbow Society meeting. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04404010
Study type Interventional
Source Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 30, 2020
Completion date February 1, 2020

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