Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery

Purpose The aim of this article is to investigate the impact of a 1-minute video describing resident training with a cataract surgical simulator on patients' perceptions regarding resident involvement in cataract surgery and to identify factors associated with patient willingness to have catara...

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Autores principales: Zachary C. Landis, John B. Fileta, Allen R. Kunselman, Joseph Sassani, Ingrid U. Scott
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc. 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/f038b178c5e941e69f5624b4b8399810
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:f038b178c5e941e69f5624b4b83998102021-11-23T00:12:02ZImpact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery2475-475710.1055/s-0041-1728659https://doaj.org/article/f038b178c5e941e69f5624b4b83998102021-07-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.1055/s-0041-1728659https://doaj.org/toc/2475-4757Purpose The aim of this article is to investigate the impact of a 1-minute video describing resident training with a cataract surgical simulator on patients' perceptions regarding resident involvement in cataract surgery and to identify factors associated with patient willingness to have cataract surgery performed by a resident. Design Cross-sectional survey. Methods An anonymous Likert-style survey was conducted among 430 consecutive adult patients who presented for eye examination at the Penn State Health Eye Center. The survey included questions regarding demographics, understanding of the medical training hierarchy, and patient willingness to have a resident perform their cataract surgery. There were six questions regarding patient willingness to have residents perform their cataract surgery and the second question in this set informs the patient that residents are supervised by an experienced cataract surgeon. Patients were randomly assigned to one of two groups: patients in Group 1 completed the survey only, while patients in Group 2 watched a 1-minute video describing resident training with a cataract surgical simulator prior to completing the survey. Results Four hundred fourteen of the 430 patients (96.3%) completed the survey. Overall, 24.7% (n = 102) of respondents expressed willingness to allow an ophthalmology resident to perform their cataract surgery, and that proportion increased to 54.0% (n = 223) if the patient was informed that the resident would be supervised by an experienced cataract surgeon. Patients in Group 2 were twice as likely compared with patients in Group 1 to express willingness to allow an ophthalmology resident to perform their cataract surgery (odds ratio 1.92 [1.18–3.11], p = 0.009). Conclusions A thorough informed consent process including information regarding attending supervision and a brief video detailing resident training with a cataract surgery simulator may increase patient willingness to allow resident participation in cataract surgery.Zachary C. LandisJohn B. FiletaAllen R. KunselmanJoseph SassaniIngrid U. ScottThieme Medical Publishers, Inc.articlecataract surgical simulatorcataract surgery simulatorvirtual realitycataract surgery trainingophthalmology resident trainingOphthalmologyRE1-994ENJournal of Academic Ophthalmology, Vol 13, Iss 02, Pp e96-e101 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic cataract surgical simulator
cataract surgery simulator
virtual reality
cataract surgery training
ophthalmology resident training
Ophthalmology
RE1-994
spellingShingle cataract surgical simulator
cataract surgery simulator
virtual reality
cataract surgery training
ophthalmology resident training
Ophthalmology
RE1-994
Zachary C. Landis
John B. Fileta
Allen R. Kunselman
Joseph Sassani
Ingrid U. Scott
Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
description Purpose The aim of this article is to investigate the impact of a 1-minute video describing resident training with a cataract surgical simulator on patients' perceptions regarding resident involvement in cataract surgery and to identify factors associated with patient willingness to have cataract surgery performed by a resident. Design Cross-sectional survey. Methods An anonymous Likert-style survey was conducted among 430 consecutive adult patients who presented for eye examination at the Penn State Health Eye Center. The survey included questions regarding demographics, understanding of the medical training hierarchy, and patient willingness to have a resident perform their cataract surgery. There were six questions regarding patient willingness to have residents perform their cataract surgery and the second question in this set informs the patient that residents are supervised by an experienced cataract surgeon. Patients were randomly assigned to one of two groups: patients in Group 1 completed the survey only, while patients in Group 2 watched a 1-minute video describing resident training with a cataract surgical simulator prior to completing the survey. Results Four hundred fourteen of the 430 patients (96.3%) completed the survey. Overall, 24.7% (n = 102) of respondents expressed willingness to allow an ophthalmology resident to perform their cataract surgery, and that proportion increased to 54.0% (n = 223) if the patient was informed that the resident would be supervised by an experienced cataract surgeon. Patients in Group 2 were twice as likely compared with patients in Group 1 to express willingness to allow an ophthalmology resident to perform their cataract surgery (odds ratio 1.92 [1.18–3.11], p = 0.009). Conclusions A thorough informed consent process including information regarding attending supervision and a brief video detailing resident training with a cataract surgery simulator may increase patient willingness to allow resident participation in cataract surgery.
format article
author Zachary C. Landis
John B. Fileta
Allen R. Kunselman
Joseph Sassani
Ingrid U. Scott
author_facet Zachary C. Landis
John B. Fileta
Allen R. Kunselman
Joseph Sassani
Ingrid U. Scott
author_sort Zachary C. Landis
title Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
title_short Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
title_full Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
title_fullStr Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Video Describing Cataract Surgical Simulator Training on Patients' Perceptions of Resident Involvement in Cataract Surgery
title_sort impact of video describing cataract surgical simulator training on patients' perceptions of resident involvement in cataract surgery
publisher Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/f038b178c5e941e69f5624b4b8399810
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