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1 Rachel Yudkowsky MD MHPE Simulation for Patient Safety Slideset 2 Designing instructional programs with simulation
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2 What’s ahead… Teaching with simulation Partial vs Whole-task scenarios SPs, feedback and debriefing Some educational frameworks: Kolb: experiential learning Ericsson: acquisition of expertise
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3 Experiential Learning (Kolb / Dunn) Concrete Experience (an event) Active Experimentation (what is done differently) [Planning for Implementation] (what will be done differently) Reflective Observation (what happened) Abstract Conceptualization (implications)
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4 Becoming an expert: Deliberate Practice (Ericsson) Repeated practice Of elements of the task With feedback and coaching
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5 Simulations afford practice on isolated elements of a task Information gathering Data Interpretation Decision making Implementing action, treatment, procedure Communication with patient Communication with staff Standardized patients Part-task trainers Mannequins
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6 “Hybrid” Simulations with Standardized Patients SPs and part- task (procedure) trainers Mannequins and SPs / Standardized Families Mannequins and Standardized Colleagues SPs and clinical findings simulators
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7 Hybrids increase fidelity by increasing the task elements included in the simulation It depends on the stage of the learner But is this a good thing?
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8 How do you move up the ladder? Unconscious Incompetence Conscious Incompetence Conscious Competence Unconscious Competence Expertise Deliberate Practice with isolated task elements
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9 How do you move up the ladder? Unconscious Incompetence Conscious Incompetence Conscious Competence Unconscious Competence Expertise Deliberate Practice with holistic scenarios
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10 Errors and Expertise Unconscious Incompetence Conscious Incompetence Conscious Competence Unconscious Competence Expertise Lack of knowledge or psychomotor skill Distraction / Lack of available attention Fixation errors
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11 Moving up the ladder, Becoming an expert: Deliberate Practice Repeated practice Of [an isolated element of] the task With feedback and coaching
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12 More Experience (alone) = Better Performance Concrete Experience (an event) Active Experimentation (what is done differently) Planning for Implementation (what will be done differently) Reflective Observation (what happened) Abstract Conceptualization (implications)
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13 Does Feedback Better Performance? Concrete Experience (an event) Active Experimentation (what is done differently) Planning for Implementation (what will be done differently) Reflective Observation (what happened) Abstract Conceptualization (implications) Feedback
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14 Sources of Feedback The self The simulator Peer observers Expert observers I know what I did and what happened… But what should I do differently?
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15 Debriefing: Public reflection and analysis Concrete Experience (an event) Active Experimentation (what is done differently) Planning for Implementation (what will be done differently) Reflective Observation (what happened) Abstract Conceptualization (implications) Debriefing
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16 Recap Developing competence and expertise Experiential Learning Deliberate Practice Feedback, Debriefing, Coaching Simulation Safe Controlled Errors
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17 Developing competence quickly and safely What are other ways that simulation can promote patient safety?
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18 Next: Assignment 2
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