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Is it time to incorporate hands-on simulation into the cardiothoracic surgery curriculum?

Nabil HusseinAlicja ZientaraCan Gollmann-TepeköylüMahmoud Loubani
Published in: Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery (2021)
The COVID pandemic has had huge implications for training in cardiothoracic surgery. The reduction in training opportunities has led to concerns from trainees globally regarding the impact on their learning and their training progression. Surgical simulation is effective in the development of technical skills in cardiothoracic surgery with numerous examples of low and high-fidelity simulators. Despite this the incorporation of such methods into training curricula worldwide is seldom. Core fundamentals are required to successfully implement surgical simulation into training programmes, which includes; commitment from trainers, regular sessions and structured feedback. Few programmes have demonstrated the successful incorporation of surgical simulation and there is a growing acceptance of its place in the speciality. As we recover from this challenging period it may be the right opportunity to evolve how we train our current and future trainees by incorporating hands-on simulation as a fundamental part of the cardiothoracic curriculum.
Keyphrases
  • virtual reality
  • minimally invasive
  • coronary artery bypass
  • medical students
  • primary care
  • mass spectrometry
  • general practice
  • atrial fibrillation
  • coronary artery disease
  • current status
  • acute coronary syndrome