A comparative study of irrigation techniques and the development of a self-serve training model for ophthalmology residents
Weifeng Huang, Zuohong Li, Yang Gao, Xiaohui Wang, Mingfeng Lu, Xianchai Lin, Xuanwei Liang, Rong Lu

TL;DR
This study compares two lacrimal irrigation techniques and introduces a self-serve training model to improve ophthalmology residents' skills and confidence.
Contribution
A haptic-visual self-serve training model is introduced to enhance skill acquisition in lacrimal irrigation for ophthalmology residents.
Findings
Technique 1 was preferred for ease of use, while Technique 2 was favored for pressurized irrigation scenarios.
The self-serve training model significantly increased residents' confidence scores compared to the control group.
Key barriers to proficiency included lack of training models and psychological anxiety.
Abstract
Lacrimal irrigation is a fundamental skill for diagnosing and managing lacrimal diseases. This study evaluates two lacrimal irrigation techniques and introduces a haptic-visual integrated self-serve training model to enhance skill acquisition among novice ophthalmology residents. Ninety-two ophthalmology residents were randomized into Group A (n = 47) and Group B (n = 45). Both groups completed an 8-hour training program comprising theoretical instruction, demonstrations, and hands-on practice. Group A provided feedback to refine the training model, which was subsequently implemented in Group B1 (n = 23), while Group B2 (n = 22) served as the control. Outcomes were assessed through skill evaluations and post-training questionnaires measuring confidence scores and perceived efficacy. In Group A, 70.2% of participants preferred Technique 1 for its perceived ease of use, while 29.8%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNasolacrimal Duct Obstruction Treatments · Ocular Infections and Treatments · Sinusitis and nasal conditions
