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Advancing healthcare practice and education via data sharing: demonstrating the utility of open data by training an artificial intelligence model to assess cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills.

Constable, Merryn D; Zhang, Francis Xiatian; Conner, Tony; Monk, Daniel; Rajsic, Jason; Ford, Claire; Park, Laura Jillian; Platt, Alan; Porteous, Debra; Grierson, Lawrence; Shum, Hubert P H

Advancing healthcare practice and education via data sharing: demonstrating the utility of open data by training an artificial intelligence model to assess cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills. Thumbnail


Authors

Merryn D Constable

Profile image of Xiatian Zhang

Xiatian Zhang xiatian.zhang@durham.ac.uk
PGR Student Doctor of Philosophy

Tony Conner

Daniel Monk

Jason Rajsic

Claire Ford

Laura Jillian Park

Alan Platt

Debra Porteous

Lawrence Grierson



Abstract

Health professional education stands to gain substantially from collective efforts toward building video databases of skill performances in both real and simulated settings. An accessible resource of videos that demonstrate an array of performances – both good and bad—provides an opportunity for interdisciplinary research collaborations that can advance our understanding of movement that reflects technical expertise, support educational tool development, and facilitate assessment practices. In this paper we raise important ethical and legal considerations when building and sharing health professions education data. Collective data sharing may produce new knowledge and tools to support healthcare professional education. We demonstrate the utility of a data-sharing culture by providing and leveraging a database of cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) performances that vary in quality. The CPR skills performance database (collected for the purpose of this research, hosted at UK Data Service’s ReShare Repository) contains videos from 40 participants recorded from 6 different angles, allowing for 3D reconstruction for movement analysis. The video footage is accompanied by quality ratings from 2 experts, participants’ self-reported confidence and frequency of performing CPR, and the demographics of the participants. From this data, we present an Automatic Clinical Assessment tool for Basic Life Support that uses pose estimation to determine the spatial location of the participant’s movements during CPR and a deep learning network that assesses the performance quality.

Citation

Constable, M. D., Zhang, F. X., Conner, T., Monk, D., Rajsic, J., Ford, C., Park, L. J., Platt, A., Porteous, D., Grierson, L., & Shum, H. P. H. (online). Advancing healthcare practice and education via data sharing: demonstrating the utility of open data by training an artificial intelligence model to assess cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills. Advances in Health Sciences Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10459-024-10369-5

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 26, 2024
Online Publication Date Sep 9, 2024
Deposit Date Sep 4, 2024
Publicly Available Date Sep 20, 2024
Journal Advances in Health Sciences Education
Print ISSN 1382-4996
Electronic ISSN 1573-1677
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s10459-024-10369-5
Keywords Healthcare professional skills, Competency-based education, Deep learning, Nursing skills, Pose estimation, Healthcare skills databases
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2785989

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