Excessive intra-operative noise in cardiac surgery has the potential to serve as source of distraction and additional cognitive workload for the surgical team, and may interfere with optimal performance. The separation from bypass phase is a technically complex phase of surgery, making it highly susceptible to communication breakdowns due to high cognitive demands and requiring tightly coupled team coordination. The objective of this study was to investigate team cognitive workload levels and communication in relation to intra-operative time periods representative of infrequent vs. frequent peaks in ambient noise. Compared to 5-minute segments with no peaks in noise at all, segments with the highest percentage of noise peaks (≥10%) were significantly associated with higher team members' heart rate before, during, and after noise segments analyzed. These noisier segments were also associated with a significantly higher level of case-irrelevant communication events. These data suggest that case-irrelevant conversations associated with a greater degree of excessive peaks in noise may be associated with team workload levels, warranting further investigation into efforts to standardize communication during critical surgical phases.

Association Between Operating Room Noise and Team Cognitive Workload in Cardiac Surgery / Kennedy-Metz, L. R.; Arshanskiy, M.; Keller, S.; Arney, D.; Dias, R. D.; Zenati, M. A.. - (2022), pp. 89-93. ( 2022 IEEE International Conference on Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Situation Management, CogSIMA 2022 New York USA 20 Giugno 2022) [10.1109/CogSIMA54611.2022.9830675].

Association Between Operating Room Noise and Team Cognitive Workload in Cardiac Surgery

Zenati M. A.
Ultimo
2022-01-01

Abstract

Excessive intra-operative noise in cardiac surgery has the potential to serve as source of distraction and additional cognitive workload for the surgical team, and may interfere with optimal performance. The separation from bypass phase is a technically complex phase of surgery, making it highly susceptible to communication breakdowns due to high cognitive demands and requiring tightly coupled team coordination. The objective of this study was to investigate team cognitive workload levels and communication in relation to intra-operative time periods representative of infrequent vs. frequent peaks in ambient noise. Compared to 5-minute segments with no peaks in noise at all, segments with the highest percentage of noise peaks (≥10%) were significantly associated with higher team members' heart rate before, during, and after noise segments analyzed. These noisier segments were also associated with a significantly higher level of case-irrelevant communication events. These data suggest that case-irrelevant conversations associated with a greater degree of excessive peaks in noise may be associated with team workload levels, warranting further investigation into efforts to standardize communication during critical surgical phases.
2022
2022 IEEE Conference on Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Situation Management (CogSIMA)
New York USA
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
9781665483308
Settore MEDS-13/C - Chirurgia cardiaca
Kennedy-Metz, L. R.; Arshanskiy, M.; Keller, S.; Arney, D.; Dias, R. D.; Zenati, M. A.
Association Between Operating Room Noise and Team Cognitive Workload in Cardiac Surgery / Kennedy-Metz, L. R.; Arshanskiy, M.; Keller, S.; Arney, D.; Dias, R. D.; Zenati, M. A.. - (2022), pp. 89-93. ( 2022 IEEE International Conference on Cognitive and Computational Aspects of Situation Management, CogSIMA 2022 New York USA 20 Giugno 2022) [10.1109/CogSIMA54611.2022.9830675].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/472968
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