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SIMULATION IN MEDICAL SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine [email protected]

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Page 1: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

SIMULATION IN MEDICAL SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATIONEDUCATION

Professor Harry Owen

and

Val Follows

Flinders University School of Medicine

[email protected]

Page 2: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Simulation in Medical Education• Simulation technologies used in Medical

Education in Australia, the US and Europe

• Setting up the Flinders University Medical School Clinical Skills and Simulation Unit

• Fundamentals of high-fidelity simulation

• Where do we go from here? Some observations on the future of simulation

Page 3: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Who’s who in medical education

• Basic medical education– Medical students

• Pre-vocational medical education– Interns, RMOs, PGY 1&2

• Specialist training (discipline-based)– Registrars/Senior registrars/Fellows

• Specialists and GPs (life-long learning)– CME, MOPS, IRM, etc

• Teachers and trainers

Page 4: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

AdelaideSouth Australia

1111

22

11

(1)(1)

(1)(1)

Page 5: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Source: Jones A (BMSC)

Page 6: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Simulation centres

2

209

5

25

10

195

6

11

2

10

2

Page 7: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Publications on ‘patient simulation’ in clinical care

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

'89 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02

Papers

Year

Page 8: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Simulation technologies used in medical education

• Computer-based simulations (micro-worlds, micro-simulation)

• Virtual environments +/- haptics

• Part-task trainers

• Low-fidelity simulators/manikins

• Simulated or standardised patients

• Hybrid simulations

• High-fidelity (full mission) simulation

Page 9: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Knowledge/Skills/Attitudes

• Individual psychomotor skills

• Appropriate application of skills

• Communication / Team performance / Leadership skills (CRM)

• Supervision/teaching

• Assessment

Page 10: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Knowledge/Skills/Attitudes

• Teaching best practice– learner centred– appropriate use of technology

• Assessment best practice– Valid and reliable– Reproducible

Page 11: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

The Flinders Clinical Skills and Simulation Unit

• Grew from a project to improve airway management teaching to medical students

• Value to teaching other health professionals and other skills recognised

• Funding generated from teaching outside the medical school

Page 12: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Endotracheal intubation

• Learnt on patients under anaesthesia

• No special consent• Duty of care to protect

patient from harm• Increased risk when

performed by a student or trainee

Page 13: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Endotracheal intubation

• ETI needed by many health professionals, including anesthesiologists, paramedics/EMTs, rural GPs, emergency physicians, ICU staff, respiratory therapists, etc.

• Competence requires practise

Page 14: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

• Animals– Small, e.g. cats– Large, e.g. dogs or

monkeys

• Unconscious patients– In the OR– In ICU

• Newly dead/recently deceased

• Cadavers• Simulators

When and how should ETI be taught?

Page 15: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

The learning environmentThe learning environment

• Quiet, few Quiet, few distractorsdistractors

• Clinical equipmentClinical equipment• Expert tutorsExpert tutors• Realistic modelsRealistic models• Many different Many different

modelsmodels– Easy Easy difficult difficult

very difficult very difficult

Page 16: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

CPR Prompt ®

(Compliant)Actar D-Fib® (Armstrong)

Little Anne™ (Laerdal)

CPR Pal® (Ambu)

Basic Buddy™ (Lifeform)

Economy Saniman ®

(Nasco)

Adult A-A Female ®

(Nasco)

Fat Old Fred ®

(Lifeform)David/Adam ®

(Nasco)

Page 17: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

The Flinders Clinical Skills and Simulation Unit

• Computer-based Teaching – ResusSim– CathSim– PA simulator– ECG– Local anaesthesia

• Part-task trainers– BLS & ALS– IVI & CVC– Trauma– Adult– Gynae & Obstetric– Neonatal– Premature (28wks)– Paediatric (age

range)

Page 18: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

The Flinders Clinical Skills and Simulation Unit

• Several whole body manikins including:– ResusciBaby– ALS baby– ResusciAnne with

SkillReporter– Mr Hurt– Nursing Anne– Megacode Kid– etc

• SimMan UPS– Postoperative care

modules– Trauma modules– Severe Trauma

modules– Local produced

dental trauma modules

Page 19: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Anatomy of a simulation (1)

Components• Student/trainee/

health professional • Procedure/task/skill/test/

treatment or equipment• Patient and/or disease

process• Trainer/supervisor

Page 20: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Anatomy of a simulation (2)

Function of components• Passive

– Enhance setting for realism

• Active– Change in a programmed way

• Interactive– Responds to action or event

Page 21: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Trainees learning cricothyrotomy on a part-task trainer

(Note educational aids in background)

Trainee performing an emergency cricothyrotomy in a full-mission simulation.

(Note more realistic setting)

Page 22: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (1)

• Determine educational needs and choose most efficient and effective

• Need to balance resource availability and student demand

• May need to ‘promote’ low-tech solutions

Page 23: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (2)

• Confirm teaching goals can be achieved using simulation

• Develop scenario, acquire equipment needed and prepare associated materials

• Test and validate the simulation

Page 24: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Options for running simulations• Free-form

– Easy but poor learning

• ‘On the fly’– Scripted but intensive for the ‘controller’ and

some variables may appear discontinuous

• Programmed trends– More sophisticated simulations possible

• Trends and event handlers– Facilitates high-fidelity simulation with most

realistic response to interventions

Page 25: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Resources needed

• Equipment:– Simulators, monitors, defibrillator, trolleys, etc

• Disposables:– Appropriate for scenario, setting and

participants, re-use w/o compromising fidelity

• Faculty:– Trained, available, practised

• Support staff:– Technician/bio-medical engineer essential!

Page 26: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Before and after simulations...

• Set-up scenario– eg. make blood, set up area, X-rays, notes, etc

• Load simulation program • Check everything works

– Cameras, VCR, communicators

Afterwards...• Check simulator (replace or repair parts)• Clean everything used and put away• Replace/reorder all used items

Page 27: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (3)

• Allow time for briefing and familiarisation with the patient simulator and equipment

• Brief participants on:– Broad objectives– The scenario– How to get help

Page 28: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (4)

Always follow the script but...

…have alternative outcomes planned and rehearsedSimulation control room

Page 29: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (5)Using simulation situations

can be re-run to explore outcome with different treatments

Mission critical tasks can be performed by learners without putting patients at risk

Page 30: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

High fidelity simulation (6)

Facilitated debriefing with an expert practitioner. Participants reflect on their own performance and discuss this with the group

Page 31: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

How we use the SimMan UPS• Anaesthesia• Emergency medicine• Family Medicine/GP• CCU/ICU• Trauma/retrievals• Paramedics/EMT• Specialist nurses• Medical Imaging• Paediatrics• Rural health workers

• Sim Centre settings– OR, PACU, ER,

Imaging suite, post-op ward, clinic, aircraft, ambulance, home, roadside, terrorist incident, etc

• Outreach settings– Regional hospitals,

rural settings, etc

Page 32: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Medicine: A High-Risk Industry• Harvard Medical Practice Study (1991)

identified a ‘serious error’ rate of 3.7%– (serious error leads to prolonged hospital

stay or disability)

• Vincent (2001) NHS ~11% error rate with 50% preventable– ~50,000 patients pa die from medical error

or accident. Litigation cost £44billion

• Australian data - adverse event rate of ~17%

Page 33: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Successful strategies for crisis management:

• Use of written checklists to help prevent crises

Use of established procedures in responding to crises

Training in decision making and resource co-ordination

• Systematic practise in handling crises including part-task trainers and full-mission realistic simulation

Page 34: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

The future of simulation...• Skills training tool for all disciplines

– Acute care– Try new techniques and/or equipment– Patient safety initiatives– Retraining

• Multi-disciplinary training– inter-professional communication– team performance

• Training in decision-making/resource co-ordination

Page 35: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Simulation technologies used in medical education

• Computer-based simulations (micro-worlds, micro-simulation)

• Virtual environments +/- haptics

• Part-task trainers

• Low-fidelity simulators/manikins

• Simulated or standardised patients

• Hybrid simulations

• High-fidelity (full mission) simulation

Page 36: SIMULATION IN MEDICAL EDUCATION Professor Harry Owen and Val Follows Flinders University School of Medicine simulation@flinders.edu.au

Simulation research must address healthcare training needs

• Improved outcomes– Fewer adverse events, fewer preventable

incidents, fewer ‘near miss’ events

• Increased efficiency of training– Improved outcomes in same or (preferably)

less training time

• Improved use of resources– Fewer failures, more efficient training,

quicker performance