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Applying Gamification to Postgraduate Endoscopic Training

U

Unity Health Toronto

Status

Completed

Conditions

Gamification
Simulation
Endoscopy

Treatments

Other: Gamified-Integrated Curriculum

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Simulation-based training curricula for gastrointestinal endoscopy have been developed and have been shown to be effective. It is possible that these curricula may be further improved. Gamification, the application of game-design principles to non-game contexts, has been shown to improve learning and skill performance in medical education. In gastrointestinal endoscopy, however, no dedicated curricula have been developed using gamification principles. We aim to evaluate the impact of applying gamification to a curriculum using SBT in endoscopy on clinical performance, compared to an identical curriculum without gamification. 36 novice endoscopists from the general surgery and gastroenterology programs at the University of Toronto will be recruited. Participants will be randomized into two groups: the Conventional Training Curriculum (CTC) Group, in which participants will receive 6 hours of training on a simulator augmented with expert feedback and interlaced with 4 hours of didactic training on the theory of colonoscopy; and the Gamified Integrated Curriculum (GIC) Group, in which participants will receive the same curriculum, using the following applications of gamified learning: a leaderboard of participant performances; badges for achievement of training landmarks; and rewards for top performance. Participants will be trained to perform colonoscopies progressively moving from a low to high complexity simulators, starting with the bench-top model (1 hour) and then moving to the EndoVR® virtual reality (VR) gastroenterology simulator (5 hours). Performance will be assessed at three points: prior to training (pre-test), immediately after training (acquisition post-test) and 4-6 weeks after training (retention test). Assessment will take place on the simulator at all three time points and during two live colonoscopies at the retention test. The primary outcome measure will be the difference in clinical colonoscopy performance between the two training groups, as assessed by the Joint Advisory Group for GI Endoscopy Direct Observation of Procedural Skills (JAG/DOPS). We aim to have data collection finished by 2018. Our results have the potential to improve existing curricula for training in colonoscopy. Moreover, the development of a gamified curriculum in procedural skills may have applicability to other specialities, such as general surgery and anesthesiology.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participants must be novice endoscopists enrolled in general surgery, adult gastroenterology and pediatric gastroenterology programs at the University of Toronto

Exclusion criteria

  • Participants will be excluded if they have performed 25 or more real or simulated endoscopic procedures

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Control Group: Conventional Training Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
This group will receive 4 hours of didactic and hands-on sessions on colonoscopy theory and non-technical skills. Participants will also watch a video that demonstrates an ideal endoscopic procedure. After each didactic session, a short multiple-choice questionnaire based on the topics covered in that session will be administered. In addition to didactic training, the control group will be given six hours of expert-assisted instruction on low-fidelity (1 hour) and high-fidelity (5 hours) colonoscopy simulators. Six modules of increasing difficulty in colonoscopy will be taught using one-on-one feedback from an expert academic endoscopist. The endoscopy instructor will demonstrate techniques and provide feedback. During training on the high-fidelity simulator, the last two hours will take the form of the integrated scenario, which will feature a standardized patient (SP) and standardized nurse (SN). Feedback will be given after each integrated scenario by the instructor.
Treatment:
Other: Gamified-Integrated Curriculum
Intervention Group: Gamified-Integrated Curriculum (GIC)
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention group will receive the same core training as the control group with additional elements of gamification: leaderboards and badges. First, leaderboards will be used to track and rank participants' performances. This will be done through an anonymized ID tag that allows a participant to identify only their position on the leaderboard. This leaderboard will include 4 components: non-technical skills, technical skills, cognitive skills, and overall ranking. Scores will be aggregated only from participants training on the same days. The leaderboard will be displayed on a central laptop and/or TV screen and will be accessible at any time throughout the day. Second, participants in the GIC group will have the opportunity to be rewarded for their performances using achievement badges which are visual cues to the player that he or she has achieved something. Awards will be given to participants at the top of the leaderboard and with the most badges.
Treatment:
Other: Gamified-Integrated Curriculum

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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