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This study assessed the feasibility and effectiveness of using Mixed Reality (MR) through the use of HoloLens2TM technology to enhance emergency clinical care delivery in a simulated environment. This was achieved by inviting 22 resident grade doctors to complete two scenarios. Each scenario was supported either by standard care methods or Mixed reality. The participants were randomised to at the start of the scenarios to determine which support they would receive first. The main outcome was to see if there was difference in error rates. This was assessed using the ICECAP multidimensional error capture tool. Secondary outcomes included teamwork, scenario completion, stress/cognitive load, and Mixed reality device user acceptability.
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Prior to the commencement of the study, all eligible participants were required to provide their consent to participate. Participants were then provided with a standardized HL2 headset and operational tutorial, and completed a qualitative questionnaire to assess their clinical experience and exposure to the technology. The tutorial, which was guided by the research team, included a practical induction providing fundamentals of use, how to make and receive calls, and how to use the clinical data assets provided. Participants were also required to pass a competency test to ensure standardized basic technical competency and mitigate device-related first-use learning effects.
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22 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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