Residents' training to retinal photocoagulation: virtual reality compared to conventional apprenticeship
Virtual reality is one of these recent technologies which can provide an efficient help in the field of surgical apprenticeship. We achieved an original training simulator for retinal photocoagulation...
Technology and human errors in image-guided surgeries
Using image guidance for stereotactic surgery has been widely adopted in neurosurgery, orthopedic surgery and other surgery operations. Careful, precise and robust implementation of image-guidance can...
Proc. SPIE, Vol. 3262, 74 (1998);
doi:10.1117/12.309457
Online Publication Date: 7 May 2003
Conference Date: Tuesday 27 January 1998
Conference Location: San Jose, CA, USA
Conference Title: Surgical-Assist Systems
Conference Chairs: Marilyn Sue Bogner, Steven T. Charles, Warren S. Grundfest, James A. Harrington, Abraham Katzir, Louis S. Lome, Michael W. Vannier, Roger Von Hanwehr
Iatrogeniccomplications in laparoscopic surgery, as in any field, stem fromhuman error. In recent years, cognitive psychologists have developed theoriesfor understanding and analyzing human error, and the application ofthese principles has decreased error rates in the aviation andnuclear power industries. The purpose of this study was toapply error analysis to laparoscopic surgery and evaluate its potentialfor preventing complications. Our approach is based on James Reason'sframework using a classification of errors according to three performancelevels: at the skill- based performance level, slips are causedby attention failures, and lapses result form memory failures. Rule-basedmistakes constitute the second level. Knowledge-based mistakes occur at thehighest performance level and are caused by shortcomings in consciousprocessing. These errors committed by the performer 'at the sharpend' occur in typical situations which often times are broughtabout by already built-in latent system failures. We present aseries of case studies in laparoscopic surgery in which errorsare classified and the influence of intrinsic failures and extrinsicsystem flaws are evaluated. Most serious technical errors in lapsurgery stem from a rule-based or knowledge- based mistake triggeredby cognitive underspecification due to incomplete or illusory visual inputinformation. Error analysis in laparoscopic surgery should be able toimprove human performance, and it should detect and help eliminatesystem flaws. Complication rates in laparoscopic surgery due to technicalerrors can thus be considerably reduced.