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Creating Context With Prebriefing: A Case Example Using Simulation

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TLDR
Detailed accounts of the activities surrounding simulation that support student learning in multiple domains are provided by providing detailed description of learning activities surrounding a simulation experience with a deteriorating cardiac patient.
Abstract
Background: Educational advantages of simulation have been widely reported. Pre-briefing and debriefing support simulation methods. However, few detailed accounts of how the learning activities surrounding simulation are implemented exist. Objectives: This case example provides a detailed description of learning activities surrounding a simulation experience with a deteriorating cardiac patient. The educational sequence integrates Benner et al. ’s goals for transforming nursing education. The study objectives were to design and evaluate an educational sequence using narrative, games, and simulation to teach students how to manage and anticipate the care of a deteriorating patient. Design: A case example with descriptive quantitative and qualitative evaluation is presented. Setting: The study took place on multiple days in a university simulation laboratory. Participants: All study participants (n = 43) were senior students enrolled in a Bachelor of Science in Nursing program. Methods: Students experienced an educational sequence and then rated and ranked educational activities. Results are reported with descriptive statistics. Students and faculty responded to the question, “What will you take from this experience?” Their responses were evaluated using constant comparison and expert review for themes. Results: Students identified ‘knowing how’, ‘increasing confidence’ and ‘understanding roles’ as what they took from the experience. Students ranked the simulation itself as the most helpful. Conclusions: Incorporating Benner et al .’s transformational educational goals informed the educational sequence and engaged students in the learning experience. This paper adds uniquely to the nursing literature by providing detailed accounts of the activities surrounding simulation that support student learning in multiple domains.

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Nursing students' perceptions of high- and low fidelity simulation used as learning methods.

TL;DR: The results showed that the nursing students reported satisfaction with the implementation of the scenarios regardless of the simulation methods used, and indicated that simulation with various degrees of fidelity could be used in nursing education.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Systematic Review of Health Care Presimulation Preparation and Briefing Effectiveness

TL;DR: Presimulation preparation and briefing had positive effects on satisfaction and learning outcomes such as knowledge and skill performance and should be tailored to learner levels of clinical and simulation experience.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prebriefing in Nursing Simulation: A Concept Analysis Using Rodger's Methodology

TL;DR: The before phase of simulation, prebriefing, is a concept that is not clearly portrayed in the nursing literature as discussed by the authors, and a concept analysis, utilizing Rodger's evolutionary framework, was performed to provide clarity to pre-riefing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines and Essential Elements for Prebriefing.

TL;DR: The current established prebriefing standards and guidelines are reported, which compiles all the elements that are recommended into one document to facilitate educator training and serves as a cognitive aid and a checklist for facilitators to use in practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Prebriefing on Psychological Safety and Learning Outcomes

TL;DR: Nursing students in the experimental group showed higher team psychological safety and cardiopulmonary resuscitation performance, but there were no differences in overall academic safety or satisfaction with debriefing scores.
References
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Book

Educating nurses : a call for radical transformation

TL;DR: The Carnegie National Nursing Education Study as mentioned in this paper found that teaching and learning in the classroom and skills lab is more effective than teaching for a sense of saliency in the clinical domain, and that teaching for moral imagination is more appropriate for the role of moral imagination.
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A systematic review of the effectiveness of simulation debriefing in health professional education.

TL;DR: These results support the widely held assumption that debriefing is an important component of simulation and it is recommended thatdebriefing remains an integral component of all simulation-based learning experiences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The development of evidence-based clinical simulation scenarios: guidelines for nurse educators.

TL;DR: The purpose of this article is to discuss the Bay Area Simulation Collaborative's development of guidelines for effective evidence-based scenarios for use in hospitals and nursing schools.
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