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Medicine

Are Touchscreens Robbing a Generation of Surgeons of Their Dexterity? (bbc.com) 68

schwit1 shared this article from the BBC: A professor of surgery says students have spent so much time in front of screens and so little time using their hands that they have lost the dexterity for stitching or sewing up patients. Roger Kneebone, professor of surgical education at Imperial College, London, says young people have so little experience of craft skills that they struggle with anything practical. "It is important and an increasingly urgent issue," says Prof Kneebone, who warns medical students might have high academic grades but cannot cut or sew. "It is a concern of mine and my scientific colleagues that whereas in the past you could make the assumption that students would leave school able to do certain practical things - cutting things out, making things - that is no longer the case," says Prof Kneebone.

The professor, who teaches surgery to medical students, says young people need to have a more rounded education, including creative and artistic subjects, where they learn to use their hands. Prof Kneebone says he has seen a decline in the manual dexterity of students over the past decade - which he says is a problem for surgeons, who need craftsmanship as well as academic knowledge.... "A lot of things are reduced to swiping on a two-dimensional flat screen," he says, which he argues takes away the experience of handling materials and developing physical skills. Such skills might once have been gained at school or at home, whether in cutting textiles, measuring ingredients, repairing something that's broken, learning woodwork or holding an instrument. Students have become "less competent and less confident" in using their hands, he says. "We have students who have very high exam grades but lack tactile general knowledge," says the professor.

Interestingly, much of the professor's research is on simulations, according to his web page at Imperial College London, where he leads "an unorthodox and creative research group" that uses professional actors with inanimate models to create realistic clinical encounters, as well as "low-cost, portable yet highly convincing environments such as the 'inflatable operating theatre'."
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Are Touchscreens Robbing a Generation of Surgeons of Their Dexterity?

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    The real world is analog, as are all desirable interactions. Think of weaving or loving or trekking. Digiboi gamr-sluts pander the trivial ... promote the lax ... encourage the slovenly.

  • Touchscreens are only a part of the problem, and the article doesn't specifically single them out. Otherwise, a nice article about the practical downsides of our consumer-oriented culture.
  • This really surprised me. I was under the impression, using a smartphone was a feat of manual dexterity in itself. They're not particularly easy to type on, for instance.

    Would be nice if we had more research into why smartphone usage inhibits finer motor control for other activities. In my perspective, this doesn't really make a lot of sense.

    • Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Saturday November 03, 2018 @01:10PM (#57586208) Homepage
      I think hand writing with a pen or pencil requires much more physical dexterity than smearing your fingers onto a flat surface. Schooling used to require daily hand written exercise for years, even just taking notes for a few minutes each day - I do think it matters.
      • I think hand writing with a pen or pencil requires much more physical dexterity than smearing your fingers onto a flat surface. Schooling used to require daily hand written exercise for years, even just taking notes for a few minutes each day - I do think it matters.

        Beyond that, doing things that require using ones hands to manipulate objects develops skills in so so doing. My coworkers are often surprised I can reach behind a machine and screw in or unscrew items by feel without looking at them.

      • True. However, it is ironical that doctors who are supposed to have dexterous hands have barely legible hand writing!

      • I think hand writing with a pen or pencil requires much more physical dexterity than smearing your fingers onto a flat surface. Schooling used to require daily hand written exercise for years, even just taking notes for a few minutes each day - I do think it matters.

        It's ironic actually that the people who spent the most time at school (doctors and surgeons) are also the ones with famously horrible handwriting :-)

    • Using a smartphone is a amazing feat of dexterity, because the incremental movements needed to type pixel next to pixel is small.
      But you need to examine how the movement goes: You use pinky to middle finger holding the object, or all 4 main fingers to hold it. You then touch type via thumb or pointer. If you use both hands, you don't use the finer muscles in the hand to do incremental adjustments to angle to have more reach and finer movements. So touch typing on a smart phone means you don't get to

  • Sorry, but this theory that touchscreens are depriving us of manual dexterity is just ridiculous. Little kids cut and draw and paint and craft like nobody's business. That's all practicing manual dexterity. Lots of kids continue doing to that on to adulthood. Many (mostly girls) continue on with jewerly making through teen years. Many (mostly boys) are playing video games with console. Many work with electronics. Pool and darts are still popular into adulthood. Working on cars. Woodworking. Sewing. And pre

    • by religionofpeas ( 4511805 ) on Saturday November 03, 2018 @01:19PM (#57586232)

      Many (mostly boys) are playing video games with console.

      Those are totally different skills

      I don't know whether this guy is a just some quack

      No, he knows what he's talking about. How can you doubt a guy called 'Kneebone' ?

    • by tk77 ( 1774336 )

      No, but sorry. For the vast majority of kids there are still countless activities every day helping them improve their manual dexterity.

      Maybe years ago, but I'm not so sure about now. I have a few friends that work at different school districts and they all say that students are losing the ability to write for periods of time. Everything is now typing and touch screens. Schools (around here anyway) have cut down on written aspects of their courses and don't do much in the way of pushing writing. Kids have laptops in class and submit homework online, and as a result they don't have as much manual dexterity as the older generation does.

      I

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
        Also, alot of these "elite" medical students have led lives structured far beyond what many parents would consider normal.

        My daughter has a friend who brought an MCAT study guide to (mandatory) school sleepaway camp. She spends hours on scholastics and reading, but does little else. She does help in her parents restaurant, so there is probably manual dexterity involved for her.

        However, there are plenty of kids whose parents are similarly driving them and working professional careers where there is little
    • by epine ( 68316 )

      Many (mostly boys) are playing video games with console.
      ...
      I don't know whether this guy is a just some quack wondering why some up and coming students can't stitch as well as he can with his decades of experience, or if there really is some decline, but if there is some decline, I'm certain this guy's theory as to why is completely wrong.

      Like so many boys in the modern world, the distance between twitch and stitch remains undiscovered country.

      What Kneebone is probably neglecting most seriously is the ramp

    • A friend was teaching in the local university's Drama department about ten years ago and found that most freshmen were initially hopeless when given practical tasks related to costume. Her interpretation of this observation is that they had been under pressure to perform academically for years and practised fine motor skills with nothing smaller than a pen. Those that applied themselves were able learn reasonable sewing skills.
  • Evolution in action! Just one generation and we're already losing the ability to use our fingers as we did in the past. Hopefully it's not gonna be inherited just yet (epigenetics and shat), so that we have time to adjust the curriculum to make children use their fingers more.
  • People trying to eke the good out of video games pointed out that they radically improve hand-eye coordination, and in later generations of gaming systems and choices, spacial positioning and manipulation, scene analysis and pattern detection, and the ability to more easily comprehend and learn new systems.

    Even more recently, there's been folks claiming that they improve communication and leadership skills.

    I'm not going to go over the merits of those claims, but note that you can find anecdotal data to back

  • Sorry, but I'm not buying that not writing stuff out is the culprit. We've had typewriters for ages and anyone who's bound to be a surgeon was likely to have access to and use one. Hell I couldn't turn in a hand written paper 20 years ago in high school.

    This probably has more to do with more people becoming surgeons. Similar to how grade averages dropped not because people were getting dumber but because we stopped shipping little jimmy off to the factory for a 3.8 GPA.
    • If I'm getting surgery I probably _need_ surgery and for the most part I'd rather have a mediocre surgeon than no surgeon at all. Yeah, yeah, Physician do no harm, but if the harm's already been done there's such a thing as not making it (much) worse. Not so say you can't swing too far in the other direction ("Hi Everybody!" "Hi Doctor Nick!") but as long as he/she's got their license there's worse things.

      What's that old quote, "Never let perfect be the enemy of good".
  • ...that have no physical dexterity.

    Medical school is competitive. Students learn early to work to the test.

    They aren't going to practice dexterity unless you test for it.

  • Keep this and add it to the bin of information that points out the growing virtualization of life in all things.

Truly simple systems... require infinite testing. -- Norman Augustine

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