Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06622980

The Effect of an Ergonomic Educational Intervention on Laparoscopic Surgeons' Ergonomic Risk Scores (ErgoEd)

The Effect of an Ergonomic Educational Intervention on Laparoscopic Surgeons' Ergonomic Risk Scores

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
10 (actual)
Sponsor
Milton Keynes University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to determine whether education of surgeons can reduce the physical strain of performing surgery. Laparoscopic surgery is known to be beneficial for patients but can cause both short- and long-term musculoskeletal injuries for the surgeons who perform it. The purpose of the study is to investigate whether the physical risks to surgeons can be reduced by educating them on how to best set up the operating theatre and equipment, and how to optimise their posture and position whilst operating.

Detailed description

This study has been designed to assess whether receiving education in ergonomic principles can lower surgeons' ergonomic risk scores when performing laparoscopic surgery. The study will recruit surgeons who regularly perform laparoscopic surgery, with no stipulations on surgeon speciality. All surgeons will be required to have completed at least 20 laparoscopic cases beforehand. The primary outcome will be assessed intraoperatively, with additional questionnaire data collected immediately postoperatively. Assessment of ergonomics (REBA score) will be done from still photographs that focus on the operating surgeon, although other team members may be visible in the background. Photographs will be analysed postoperatively by the research team and an overall REBA score calculated for each surgeon. Other secondary outcomes will be assessed via a questionnaire. After each operation surgeons will complete a subjective cognitive and physical strain questionnaire based on the NASA-TLX and SURG-TLX scales, which are both widely used and validated tools. Additional questions have been added in order to provide data for the development of a new subjective physical strain questionnaire based on pooled data from several surgical ergonomics trials.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEREducationThe educational intervention will take the form of a video explaining both general ergonomic principles and specific advice for laparoscopic surgeons. This video will be shown to surgeons at a time of their convenience and the research team will be available to answer any further questions at this time. The educational video will cover both ergonomics principles and specific advice for laparoscopic surgeons. The principles will be relevant to any situation, including those outside the medical field. The laparoscopic-specific section will include tips for optimisation of operating theatre set-up and advice on posture and body position. The video content will be reviewed by experts experienced in surgical ergonomics education to ensure it covers all useful information and is in line with best practice.

Timeline

Start date
2024-02-21
Primary completion
2024-09-12
Completion
2024-09-12
First posted
2024-10-02
Last updated
2024-10-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06622980. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.