Extended Reality-Enhanced Mental Health Consultation Training: Quantitative Evaluation Study.

IF 3.2 Q1 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Katherine Hiley, Zanib Bi-Mohammad, Luke Taylor, Rebecca Burgess-Dawson, Dominic Patterson, Devon Puttick-Whiteman, Christopher Gay, Janette Hiscoe, Chris Munsch, Sally Richardson, Mark Knowles-Lee, Celia Beecham, Neil Ralph, Arunangsu Chatterjee, Ryan Mathew, Faisal Mushtaq
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The use of extended reality (XR) technologies in health care can potentially address some of the significant resource and time constraints related to delivering training for health care professionals. While substantial progress in realizing this potential has been made across several domains, including surgery, anatomy, and rehabilitation, the implementation of XR in mental health training, where nuanced humanistic interactions are central, has lagged.

Objective: Given the growing societal and health care service need for trained mental health and care workers, coupled with the heterogeneity of exposure during training and the shortage of placement opportunities, we explored the feasibility and utility of a novel XR tool for mental health consultation training. Specifically, we set out to evaluate a training simulation created through collaboration among software developers, clinicians, and learning technologists, in which users interact with a virtual patient, "Stacey," through a virtual reality or augmented reality head-mounted display. The tool was designed to provide trainee health care professionals with an immersive experience of a consultation with a patient presenting with perinatal mental health symptoms. Users verbally interacted with the patient, and a human instructor selected responses from a repository of prerecorded voice-acted clips.

Methods: In a pilot experiment, we confirmed the face validity and usability of this platform for perinatal and primary care training with subject-matter experts. In our follow-up experiment, we delivered personalized 1-hour training sessions to 123 participants, comprising mental health nursing trainees, general practitioner doctors in training, and students in psychology and medicine. This phase involved a comprehensive evaluation focusing on usability, validity, and both cognitive and affective learning outcomes.

Results: We found significant enhancements in learning metrics across all participant groups. Notably, there was a marked increase in understanding (P<.001) and motivation (P<.001), coupled with decreased anxiety related to mental health consultations (P<.001). There were also significant improvements to considerations toward careers in perinatal mental health (P<.001).

Conclusions: Our findings show, for the first time, that XR can be used to provide an effective, standardized, and reproducible tool for trainees to develop their mental health consultation skills. We suggest that XR could provide a solution to overcoming the current resource challenges associated with equipping current and future health care professionals, which are likely to be exacerbated by workforce expansion plans.

背景:在医疗保健领域使用扩展现实(XR)技术有可能解决与医疗保健专业人员培训相关的资源和时间限制问题。虽然在外科手术、解剖学和康复等多个领域,在实现这一潜力方面取得了实质性进展,但在心理健康培训方面,XR 的应用却相对滞后,而心理健康培训的核心是细致入微的人文互动:鉴于社会和医疗保健服务对训练有素的心理健康和护理工作者的需求日益增长,加上培训期间接触机会的异质性和实习机会的短缺,我们探索了一种新型 XR 工具在心理健康咨询培训中的可行性和实用性。具体来说,我们着手对软件开发人员、临床医生和学习技术专家合作创建的培训模拟工具进行评估,在该模拟工具中,用户通过虚拟现实或增强现实头戴式显示器与虚拟病人 "斯泰西 "进行互动。设计该工具的目的是让受训的医护人员身临其境地体验与一名出现围产期精神健康症状的患者进行会诊的过程。用户与患者进行口头互动,而人类指导员则从预先录制的语音片段库中选择反应:在试点实验中,我们与主题专家一起确认了该平台在围产期和初级保健培训中的面效度和可用性。在后续实验中,我们为 123 名参与者提供了 1 小时的个性化培训课程,其中包括心理健康护理培训生、正在接受培训的全科医生以及心理学和医学专业的学生。在这一阶段,我们对培训课程的可用性、有效性以及认知和情感学习成果进行了全面评估:结果:我们发现,所有参与者群体的学习指标都有明显提高。结论:我们的研究结果表明,我们首次发现了一种新的学习方法:我们的研究结果首次表明,XR 可用于为受训者提供有效、标准化和可重复的工具,以提高他们的心理健康咨询技能。我们认为,XR 可以为克服当前与装备当前和未来的医疗保健专业人员相关的资源挑战提供一种解决方案,而劳动力扩张计划可能会加剧这种挑战。
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来源期刊
JMIR Medical Education
JMIR Medical Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
审稿时长
8 weeks
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