Often the less experienced as medical students are charged with the role as camera navigator and assistant during laparoscopic surgery. Camera navigation is generally considered an easy skill, but it requires specific psychomotor and visuospatial skills. Simulation-based training can improve surgical skills, but little is known on how to optimally structure a training program to acquire camera navigation skills. The objective of this trial is to examine if simulation-based laparoscopic camera navigation skills transfer to the operating room after practicing one of two fundamentally different laparoscopic tasks on a simulator. The first group practice a procedure on a virtual reality simulator, the second group practice camera navigation on a virtual reality simulator and the third group receive no training. All participants are tested as camera navigators and assistants during a procedure in the operating room.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
36
Time limited simulation based training on camera navigation tasks on a virtual reality-simulator.
Time limited simulation based training on laparoscopic procedure on a virtual reality-simulator.
Surgeons' rating on camera navigation performance during a procedure in the operating room.
Time frame: up to 1-3 weeks post training
Score on the intrinsic motivation inventory-scale
An expression of motivation as a surgical assistant and camera navigation after completion of the procedure in the OR
Time frame: 2 months
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