A Facial Trauma Simulation Course for Evaluation and Treatment of Facial Fractures.

JAMA facial plastic surgery 2017 Vol.19(6) p. 464-467

Christophel JJ, Park SS, Nogan SJ, Essig GF

Abstract

[IMPORTANCE] Traditional facial trauma laboratories are used for teaching basic concepts of fracture reduction and hardware manipulation. Facial trauma simulation laboratories allow training physicians the opportunity to develop unique treatment plans as they would in real patient encounters.

[OBJECTIVE] To assess the value of a novel facial trauma simulation course requiring residents to practice advanced decision making.

[DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS] Data were prospectively collected July 23 and August 23 and 24, 2016, in a survey study during a resident physician trauma simulation course. Fresh frozen cadaver heads were fractured using an impactor that applied a measurable amount of force. Each head was scanned with high-resolution computed tomography. Residents were paired and tasked with evaluating their specimen's imaging findings and developing a treatment plan.

[MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES] Before the course, residents were asked their postgraduate year level, number of facial fractures treated as a resident surgeon, and their comfort level based on the Otolaryngology Milestone for Facial Trauma (OMFT; ratings range from 0-5, with 5 indicating equivalent to fellow-level experience). After the course, residents were asked to assess the course's value relative to a theoretical number of actual operative cases, and a posttraining OMFT assessment was obtained.

[RESULTS] Thirty resident physicians completed the course at 2 institutions. Residents represented an equivalent distribution of postgraduate year levels. The residents stated that the course was worth a mean (SD) of 6.4 (2.8) operative cases of facial trauma in terms of surgical learning. The mean change in self-reported OMFT rating after the course was 0.87 (95% CI, 0.67-1.07; P < .001, paired t test). On the basis of this change in self-perceived OMFT rating, the course was deemed to be worth 1.5 years of residency training in the management of facial fractures.

[CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE] Conducting a facial trauma simulation course increases resident experience with advanced surgical decision making.

[LEVEL OF EVIDENCE] NA.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
합병증 head scispacy 1
약물 [IMPORTANCE] Traditional scispacy 1
약물 [OBJECTIVE] scispacy 1
약물 [MAIN OUTCOMES AND scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSION AND scispacy 1
질환 Trauma C0043251
Wounds and Injuries
scispacy 1
질환 Fractures C0016658
Fracture
scispacy 1
질환 fracture C0016658
Fracture
scispacy 1
질환 OMFT scispacy 1
기타 patient scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Cadaver; Decision Making; Education, Medical, Graduate; Educational Measurement; Facial Injuries; Humans; Internship and Residency; Otolaryngology; Prospective Studies; Simulation Training; Skull Fractures; Surgery, Plastic; Tomography, X-Ray Computed