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Educational impact of hand motion analysis in the evaluation of fast examination skills

Authors :
Zago, M.
Sforza, C.
Mariani, D.
Marconi, M.
Biloslavo, A.
La Greca, Antonio
Kurihara, H.
Casamassima, A.
Bozzo, S.
Caputo, F.
Galli, M.
La Greca A. (ORCID:0000-0002-7587-7427)
Zago, M.
Sforza, C.
Mariani, D.
Marconi, M.
Biloslavo, A.
La Greca, Antonio
Kurihara, H.
Casamassima, A.
Bozzo, S.
Caputo, F.
Galli, M.
La Greca A. (ORCID:0000-0002-7587-7427)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose: Increasing pressure pushes towards the objective competence assessment of clinical operators. Hand motion analysis (HMA) was introduced to measure surgical and clinical procedures; its recent application to FAST examinations leaves unsolved issues. This study aimed at determining optimal HMA parameters to discriminate between operators’ skill levels, and which FAST tasks are experience-dependent. Methods: Ten experienced (EG) and 13 beginner (BG) sonographers performed a FAST examination on one female and one male model. A motion capture system returned the duration, working volume, number of movements (absolute and time normalized), and hand path length (absolute and time normalized) of each view. Results: BG took more time in completing specific views, with a higher working volume (p = 0.003) and longer hands path (p < 0.001). The number of movements was lower in the EG (p < 0.001) and differed between views (p = 0.014). No significant Group/Model differences were found for the normalized number of movements. The LUQ view required a higher number of movements (p < 0.001). Conclusions: HMA identified kinematic parameters discriminating between proficiency level and critical subtasks in the FAST examination. These findings could be the base for a focused HMA-based evaluation of performances following a proctored training period. There is room to incorporate HMA into simulation metrics and evidence-based credentialing standards for clinical ultrasound applications.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1145018732
Document Type :
Electronic Resource