The deconstructed procedural description in robotic colorectal surgery
Details
Publication Year 2024-03-30,Volume 18,Issue #1,Page 147
Journal Title
Journal of Robotic Surgery
Publication Type
Review
Abstract
Increasing robotic surgical utilisation in colorectal surgery internationally has strengthened the need for standardised training. Deconstructed procedural descriptions identify components of an operation that can be integrated into proficiency-based progression training. This approach allows both access to skill level appropriate training opportunities and objective and comparable assessment. Robotic colorectal surgery has graded difficulty of operative procedures lending itself ideally to component training. Developing deconstructed procedural descriptions may assist in the structure and progression components in robotic colorectal surgical training. There is no currently published guide to procedural descriptions in robotic colorectal surgical or assessment of their training utility. This scoping review was conducted in June 2022 following the PRISMA-ScR guidelines to identify which robotic colorectal surgical procedures have available component-based procedural descriptions. Secondary aims were identifying the method of development of these descriptions and how they have been adapted in a training context. 20 published procedural descriptions were identified covering 8 robotic colorectal surgical procedures with anterior resection the most frequently described procedure. Five publications included descriptions of how the procedural description has been utilised for education and training. From these publications terminology relating to using deconstructed procedural descriptions in robotic colorectal surgical training is proposed. Development of deconstructed robotic colorectal procedural descriptions (DPDs) in an international context may assist in the development of a global curriculum of component operating competencies supported by objective metrics. This will allow for standardisation of robotic colorectal surgical training and supports a proficiency-based training approach.
Publisher
Springer Nature
Keywords
Humans; *Robotic Surgical Procedures/methods; *Colorectal Surgery/education; *Robotics/education; Curriculum; *Colorectal Neoplasms; Clinical Competence; Colorectal surgery; Curriculum design; Robotic surgery; Robotic surgical training; Surgical education
Department(s)
Surgical Oncology
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2024-04-04 02:32:05
Last Modified: 2024-04-04 03:11:41

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