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Journal ArticleDOI

Features and uses of high-fidelity medical simulations that lead to effective learning: a BEME systematic review

TLDR
While research in this field needs improvement in terms of rigor and quality, high-fidelity medical simulations are educationally effective and simulation-based education complements medical education in patient care settings.
Abstract
SUMMARY Review date: 1969 to 2003, 34 years. Background and context: Simulations are now in widespread use in medical education and medical personnel evaluation. Outcomes research on the use and effectiveness of simulation technology in medical education is scattered, inconsistent and varies widely in methodological rigor and substantive focus. Objectives: Review and synthesize existing evidence in educational science that addresses the question, ‘What are the features and uses of high-fidelity medical simulations that lead to most effective learning?’. Search strategy: The search covered five literature databases (ERIC, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Timelit) and employed 91 single search terms and concepts and their Boolean combinations. Hand searching, Internet searches and attention to the ‘grey literature’ were also used. The aim was to perform the most thorough literature search possible of peer-reviewed publications and reports in the unpublished literature that have been judged for academic quality. Inclusion and exclusion criteria: Four screening criteria were used to reduce the initial pool of 670 journal articles to a focused set of 109 studies: (a) elimination of review articles in favor of empirical studies; (b) use of a simulator as an educational assessment or intervention with learner outcomes measured quantitatively; (c) comparative research, either experimental or quasi-experimental; and (d) research that involves simulation as an educational intervention. Data extraction: Data were extracted systematically from the 109 eligible journal articles by independent coders. Each coder used a standardized data extraction protocol. Data synthesis: Qualitative data synthesis and tabular presentation of research methods and outcomes were used. Heterogeneity of research designs, educational interventions, outcome measures and timeframe precluded data synthesis using meta-analysis. Headline results: Coding accuracy for features of the journal articles is high. The extant quality of the published research is generally weak. The weight of the best available evidence suggests that high-fidelity medical simulations facilitate learning under the right conditions. These include the following:

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chaos, complexity and complicatedness: lessons from rocket science.

TL;DR: In this article, the concepts of uncertainty, complexity, and chaos were examined in physical science, and it was shown that complex and chaotic systems have highly specific characteristics that are unlikely to be present in education systems and that human learning can be understood adequately with conventional linear models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating the effectiveness of the Voxel-Man TempoSurg virtual reality simulator in facilitating learning mastoid surgery.

TL;DR: The VT is as good as CTB in curriculum integration, allowing multiple learning strategies, providing a controlled environment, individualising learning and defining benchmarks, and it appears worse with regards to face validity and feedback.
Journal ArticleDOI

Imagining a continuing interprofessional education program (CIPE) within surgical training.

TL;DR: If any rapprochement is to occur between the concept of professionalism in surgical training and broader discourses of interprofessionalism circulating within health care institutions, there is a pressing need to understand and deconstruct this conflict from the point of view of surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation in teaching regional anesthesia: current perspectives.

TL;DR: It is revealed that effective teaching strategies in regional anesthesiology and acute pain medicine are not established completely yet, and future research should be directed toward comparative-effectiveness of simulation versus other accepted teaching methods.
References
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BookDOI

To Err Is Human Building a Safer Health System

TL;DR: Boken presenterer en helhetlig strategi for hvordan myndigheter, helsepersonell, industri og forbrukere kan redusere medisinske feil.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of deliberate practice in the acquisition of expert performance.

TL;DR: A theoretical framework is proposed that explains expert performance in terms of acquired characteristics resulting from extended deliberate practice and that limits the role of innate (inherited) characteristics to general levels of activity and emotionality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of adverse events and negligence in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study I.

TL;DR: There is a substantial amount of injury to patients from medical management, and many injuries are the result of substandard care.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Assessment of Clinical skills/competence/performance

G E Miller
- 01 Sep 1990 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a method to solve the problem of homonymity of homophily in the context of homomorphic data, and no abstracts are available.
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