Background
This video-aided observational study was conducted to examine team cooperation among surgeons in a surgical team built up
with different time lengths. We predicted that the surgeons in a team that has longer teamwork experience would perform more
anticipatory movements than surgeons in a surgical team that is newly formed.
Methods
Laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication cases were videotaped with both surgical view and the OR view. An anticipatory movement
was identified when a surgeon manually provided direct assistance for an upcoming task without a request by other surgeons
in the team.
Result
A total of 28 cases of laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication were videotaped and analyzed. Fifteen operations were performed
by surgeons collaborating as a team for 10 weeks, in contrast to 13 operations performed by surgeons paired up for less than
5 weeks. Significantly more anticipatory movements were performed by the surgeons in the dedicated team (22 counts) than by
those in the developing team (19 counts, p = 0.029). However, the OR time was not significantly different (dedicated team = 111 min, developing team = 115 min, p = 0.611) between the two teams which suggests that other types of coordination would also influence surgical teamwork.
Conclusion
Working in a team allows surgeons to develop sophisticated cognition to anticipate an upcoming task and provide assistance
without verbal communication. The greater number of anticipatory movements observed in the dedicated surgical team suggests
that anticipatory movement can be a valuable measure for team cooperation. Further research with a larger number of cases
is needed to see whether performance of more anticipatory movements does shorten OR time.
Keywords Team coordination - Anticipatory movements - Surgical performance - Communication - OR efficiency - Errors prevention