Surgical Adaptation of the Situation Awareness Rating Technique (S-SART): Assessing Situational Awareness Among Medical Students

Elsevier

Available online 19 October 2022

Journal of Surgical EducationHighlights•

We developed a surgical adaptation of a validated situational awareness assessment.

Medical students possess low situational awareness prior to surgical clerkships.

Situational awareness is a learnable skill among medical students.

Greatest gains in situational awareness occur in the domain of Understanding.

Reducing cognitive load requires innovative curricula and further surgical training.

Objective

Situational awareness (SA) impacts team dynamics and patient care. However, few formal curricula and tools exist to teach and assess longitudinal SA in surgical environments. We sought to evaluate medical students’ SA in the operating room (OR) during surgical clerkships over time.

Design

We prospectively administered pre- and post-rotation surveys using a surgical adaptation of the previously validated Situation Awareness Rating Technique (SART). Surgical SART (S-SART) scores were calculated as: Situational Awareness = Understanding - (Attentional Demand - Attentional Supply) + 14. Each of 10 questions was scored from 1 to 7, with a maximum possible score of 60. Two-tailed two-sample and paired t-tests were conducted to determine differences in S-SART scores.

Participants/Setting

Sixty-nine of 75 second- and third-year medical students rotating in Surgery and Obstetrics/Gynecology clerkships at a tertiary academic medical center from September 2018 to September 2019 completed the surveys for a response rate of 92.0%.

Results

The mean baseline pre-rotation baseline S-SART score was 29.5 (SD=8.3), which increased by 20.9% to 35.9 (SD=6.9) post-rotation (p<0.001). Significant predictors of higher baseline S-SART scores included age ≥25 (p=0.02), surgical career interest (p=0.01), completion of prior surgical rotations (p<0.001), confidence about pre-procedural OR steps (p<0.001), and knowledge of OR item locations (p<0.001). There were increases in each of the subdomains of Understanding—including OR familiarity (3.2 to 4.3, p<0.001), knowledge of the medical student OR role (3.5 to 5.7, p<0.001), and knowledge of others’ OR roles (4.1 to 5.9, p<0.001)—along with increases in alertness within Attentional Supply (5.1 to 5.5, p=0.001).

Conclusions

SA is a learnable skill with increases in S-SART scores from pre- to post-rotation, with the greatest gains in the domain of Understanding. More advanced aspects of SA such as Attentional Demand may require further surgical training or curricular innovations to address these needs.

AbbreviationsSART

Situation Awareness Rating Technique

S-SART

Surgical Situation Awareness Rating Technique

Key words

Situational awareness

cognitive load

curricula

assessment

surgical

operating room

COMPETENCIES

Medical Knowledge

Professionalism

Interpersonal and Communication Skills

Practice-Based Learning and Improvement

Systems-Based Practice

© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Association of Program Directors in Surgery.

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