Dane M Chapman
Washington University in St. Louis
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Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1996
Dane M Chapman; Kenneth J Rhee; John A. Marx; Benjamin Honigman; Edward A Panacek; Dennis Martinez; B.Tomas Brofeldt; Sally H Cavanaugh
STUDY OBJECTIVES To determine (1) reliability and validity estimates of three modalities used to assess open thoracotomy procedural competency and (2) the effect of computer practice on procedural performance as measured by the three assessment modalities. METHODS An experimental, sequential assessment design with volunteer examinees completing all three assessment modalities (paper, computer, pig model) was implemented at the animal support facilities of a university medical school with an affiliated emergency medicine residency program. Level of physician training (student, resident, faculty) and type of computer practice (thoracotomy, cricothyrotomy) were independent variables. Procedural competency scores were determined for each modality; scores were defined in terms of performance time and performance accuracy for three thoracotomy procedures (opening the chest, pericardiotomy, and aortic cross-clamping). RESULTS Thoracotomy performance on the pig reliably discriminated among examinees known to differ in level of training. However, computer simulation performance did not significantly differ among examinees with different levels of training. Computer simulation practice significantly improved later performance on the computer assessment (P < .05) but not on the pig assessment. The greatest predictor of procedural competency (time and accuracy) on the pig assessment was the ability to sequentially order procedural steps. CONCLUSION This study establishes the pig model as superior to the paper and computer models as the criterion standard for open thoracotomy assessment. Psychometric properties support the pig model as the most reliable and valid model yet described for assessing thoracotomy procedural competency. Computer simulation practice using visual images (complex anatomy) and the sequential ordering of procedural steps through paper modeling show promise for teaching and assessment of prerequisite skills required to develop psychomotor procedural competency.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2004
Dane M Chapman; Stephen R. Hayden; Arthur B. Sanders; Louis S. Binder; Ann Chinnis; Kelly Corrigan; Tony LaDuca; Pam Dyne; Debra G. Perina; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Larry Sulton; Susan R. Swing
Academic Emergency Medicine | 1997
C. James Holliman; Richard C. Wuerz; Dane M Chapman; Alan J. Hirshberg
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2007
Susan R. Swing; Sandra M. Schneider; Ken Bizovi; Dane M Chapman; Louis Graff; Cherri Hobgood; Thomas W Lukens; Martha J. Radford; Arthur B. Sanders; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Linda Spillane; Laura Hruska; Robert L. Wears
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2004
Dane M Chapman; Stephen R. Hayden; Arthur B. Sanders; Louis S. Binder; Ann Chinnis; Kelly Corrigan; Tony LaDuca; Pam Dyne; Debra G. Perina; Rebecca Smith-Coggins; Larry Sulton; Susan R. Swing
Academic Emergency Medicine | 1997
Alan J. Hirshberg; C. James Holliman; Richard C. Wuerz; Dane M Chapman
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 1989
Dane M Chapman
Academic Emergency Medicine | 1999
Carolyn Haase; Patricia D. Short; Dane M Chapman; Susan A. Dersch
Academic Emergency Medicine | 1997
Dane M Chapman
Academic Emergency Medicine | 1999
Dane M Chapman