A review of participant recruitment transparency for sound validation of hip surgery simulators: a novel umbrella approach
Authors: Samaratunga, R., Johnson, L., Gatzidis, C., Swain, I., Wainwright, T. and Middleton, R.
Journal: Journal of Medical Engineering and Technology
Volume: 45
Issue: 6
Pages: 434-456
eISSN: 1464-522X
ISSN: 0309-1902
DOI: 10.1080/03091902.2021.1921868
Abstract:Malposition of implants is associated with complications, higher wear and increased revision rates in total hip replacement (THR) along with surgeon inexperience. Training THR residents to reach expert proficiency is affected by the high cost and resource limitations of traditional training techniques. Research in extended reality (XR) technologies can overcome such barriers. These offer a platform for learning, objective skill-monitoring and, potentially, for automated certification. Prior to their incorporation into curricula however, thorough validation must be undertaken. As validity is heavily dependent on the participants recruited, there is a need to review, scrutinise and define recruitment criteria in the absence of pre-defined standards, for sound simulator validation. A systematic review on PubMed and IEEE databases was conducted. Training simulator validation research in fracture, arthroscopy and arthroplasty relating to the hip was included. 46 validation studies were reviewed. It was observed that there was no uniformity in reporting or recruitment criteria, rendering cross-comparison challenging. This work developed Umbrella categories to help prioritise recruitment, and has formulated a detailed template of fields and guidelines for reporting criteria so that, in future, research may come to a consensus as to recruitment criteria for a hip “expert” or “novice”.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38357/
Source: Scopus
A review of participant recruitment transparency for sound validation of hip surgery simulators: a novel umbrella approach.
Authors: Samaratunga, R., Johnson, L., Gatzidis, C., Swain, I., Wainwright, T. and Middleton, R.
Journal: J Med Eng Technol
Volume: 45
Issue: 6
Pages: 434-456
eISSN: 1464-522X
DOI: 10.1080/03091902.2021.1921868
Abstract:Malposition of implants is associated with complications, higher wear and increased revision rates in total hip replacement (THR) along with surgeon inexperience. Training THR residents to reach expert proficiency is affected by the high cost and resource limitations of traditional training techniques. Research in extended reality (XR) technologies can overcome such barriers. These offer a platform for learning, objective skill-monitoring and, potentially, for automated certification. Prior to their incorporation into curricula however, thorough validation must be undertaken. As validity is heavily dependent on the participants recruited, there is a need to review, scrutinise and define recruitment criteria in the absence of pre-defined standards, for sound simulator validation. A systematic review on PubMed and IEEE databases was conducted. Training simulator validation research in fracture, arthroscopy and arthroplasty relating to the hip was included. 46 validation studies were reviewed. It was observed that there was no uniformity in reporting or recruitment criteria, rendering cross-comparison challenging. This work developed Umbrella categories to help prioritise recruitment, and has formulated a detailed template of fields and guidelines for reporting criteria so that, in future, research may come to a consensus as to recruitment criteria for a hip "expert" or "novice".
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38357/
Source: PubMed
A review of participant recruitment transparency for sound validation of hip surgery simulators: a novel umbrella approach
Authors: Samaratunga, R., Gatzidis, C., Swain, I., Wainwright, T., Middleton, R. and Johnson, L.
Journal: Journal of Medical Engineering and Technology
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
ISSN: 0309-1902
DOI: 10.1080/03091902.2021.1921868
Abstract:Malposition of implants is associated with complications, higher wear and increased revision rates in total hip replacement (THR) along with surgeon inexperience. Training THR residents to reach expert proficiency is affected by the high cost and resource limitations of traditional training techniques. Research in extended reality (XR) technologies can overcome such barriers. These offer a platform for learning, objective skill-monitoring and, potentially, for automated certification. Prior to their incorporation into curricula however, thorough validation must be undertaken. As validity is heavily dependent on the participants recruited, there is a need to review, scrutinise and define recruitment criteria in the absence of pre-defined standards, for sound simulator validation. A systematic review on PubMed and IEEE databases was conducted. Training simulator validation research in fracture, arthroscopy and arthroplasty relating to the hip was included. 46 validation studies were reviewed. It was observed that there was no uniformity in reporting or recruitment criteria, rendering cross-comparison challenging. This work developed Umbrella categories to help prioritise recruitment, and has formulated a detailed template of fields and guidelines for reporting criteria so that, in future, research may come to a consensus as to recruitment criteria for a hip “expert” or “novice”.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38357/
Source: Manual
A review of participant recruitment transparency for sound validation of hip surgery simulators: a novel umbrella approach.
Authors: Samaratunga, R., Johnson, L., Gatzidis, C., Swain, I., Wainwright, T. and Middleton, R.
Journal: Journal of medical engineering & technology
Volume: 45
Issue: 6
Pages: 434-456
eISSN: 1464-522X
ISSN: 0309-1902
DOI: 10.1080/03091902.2021.1921868
Abstract:Malposition of implants is associated with complications, higher wear and increased revision rates in total hip replacement (THR) along with surgeon inexperience. Training THR residents to reach expert proficiency is affected by the high cost and resource limitations of traditional training techniques. Research in extended reality (XR) technologies can overcome such barriers. These offer a platform for learning, objective skill-monitoring and, potentially, for automated certification. Prior to their incorporation into curricula however, thorough validation must be undertaken. As validity is heavily dependent on the participants recruited, there is a need to review, scrutinise and define recruitment criteria in the absence of pre-defined standards, for sound simulator validation. A systematic review on PubMed and IEEE databases was conducted. Training simulator validation research in fracture, arthroscopy and arthroplasty relating to the hip was included. 46 validation studies were reviewed. It was observed that there was no uniformity in reporting or recruitment criteria, rendering cross-comparison challenging. This work developed Umbrella categories to help prioritise recruitment, and has formulated a detailed template of fields and guidelines for reporting criteria so that, in future, research may come to a consensus as to recruitment criteria for a hip "expert" or "novice".
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38357/
Source: Europe PubMed Central
A review of participant recruitment transparency for sound validation of hip surgery simulators: a novel umbrella approach
Authors: Samaratunga, R., Johnson, L., Gatzidis, C., Swain, I.D., Wainwright, T. and Middleton, R.
Journal: Journal of Medical Engineering and Technology
Volume: 45
Issue: 6
Pages: 434-456
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
ISSN: 0309-1902
Abstract:Malposition of implants is associated with complications, higher wear and increased revision rates in total hip replacement (THR) along with surgeon inexperience. Training THR residents to reach expert proficiency is affected by the high cost and resource limitations of traditional training techniques. Research in extended reality (XR) technologies can overcome such barriers. These offer a platform for learning, objective skill-monitoring and, potentially, for automated certification. Prior to their incorporation into curricula however, thorough validation must be undertaken. As validity is heavily dependent on the participants recruited, there is a need to review, scrutinise and define recruitment criteria in the absence of pre-defined standards, for sound simulator validation. A systematic review on PubMed and IEEE databases was conducted. Training simulator validation research in fracture, arthroscopy and arthroplasty relating to the hip was included. 46 validation studies were reviewed. It was observed that there was no uniformity in reporting or recruitment criteria, rendering cross-comparison challenging. This work developed Umbrella categories to help prioritise recruitment, and has formulated a detailed template of fields and guidelines for reporting criteria so that, in future, research may come to a consensus as to recruitment criteria for a hip “expert” or “novice”.
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/38357/
Source: BURO EPrints