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03:01 PM CDT on Friday, April 9, 2004
New York (AP) -- All those years on the couch playing Nintendo and
PlayStation appear to be paying off for surgeons.
Researchers found that doctors who spent at least three hours a week
playing video games made about 37 percent less mistakes in laparoscopic
surgery and performed the task 27 percent faster than their counterparts
who did not play video games.
"I use the same hand-eye coordination to play video games as I use for
surgery," said Dr. James "Butch" Rosser, 49, who demonstrated the
results of his study Tuesday at Beth Israel Medical Center.
Laparoscopic surgery -- using a tiny camera and instruments controlled
by joysticks outside the body -- is performed on just about any part of
the body, from an appendix to the colon and gall bladder.
The minimally intrusive surgery involves making tiny keyhole incisions,
inserting a mini-video camera that sends images to an external video
screen, with the surgical tools remote-controlled by the surgeon
watching the screen. Surgeons can now practice their techniques through
video simulations.
Rosser said the skill needed for laparoscopic surgery is "like tying
your shoelaces with 3-foot-long chopsticks."
"Yes, here we go!" said Rosser, sitting in front of a Super Monkey Ball
game, which shoots a ball into a confined goal. "This is a nice,
wholesome game. No blood and guts. But I need the same kind of skill to
go into a body and sew two pieces of intestine together."
The study on whether good video game skills translate into surgical
prowess was done by researchers with Beth Israel and the National
Institute on Media and the Family at Iowa State University. It was based
on testing 33 fellow doctors -- 12 attending physicians and 21 medical
school residents who participated from May to August 2003.
Each doctor completed three video game tasks that tested such factors as
motor skills, reaction time and hand-eye coordination.
The study "landmarks the arrival of Generation X into medicine," said
the study's co-author, Dr. Paul J. Lynch, a Beth Israel anesthesiologist
who has studied the effects of video games for years.
Kurt Squire, a University of Wisconsin researcher of video game effects
on learning, said that "with a video game, you can definitely develop
timing and a sense of touch, as well as a very intuitive feel for
manipulating devices."
Squire, who was not involved in Rosser's project, said applying such
games to surgery training "could play a key role in preparing medical
health professionals."
Beth Israel is now experimenting with applying the findings.
Rosser has developed a course called Top Gun, in which surgical trainees
warm up their coordination, agility and accuracy with a video game
before entering the operating room.
"It's like a good football player," Rosser said, "you have to warm up
first."
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