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Journal ArticleDOI

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

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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 The aim was to perform the most thorough literature search possible of peer-reviewed publications and reports in the unpublished literature that have been judged for academic quality.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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Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review of simulation-based medical education research: 2003-2009

TL;DR: This article reviews and critically evaluates historical and contemporary research on simulation‐based medical education (SBME) and presents and discusses 12 features and best practices that teachers should know in order to use medical simulation technology to maximum educational benefit.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technology-enhanced simulation for health professions education: a systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: In comparison with no intervention, technology-enhanced simulation training in health professions education is consistently associated with large effects for outcomes of knowledge, skills, and behaviors and moderate effects for patient-related outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Debriefing in Simulation-Based Learning

TL;DR: The aim of this paper is to critically review what is felt to be important about the role of debriefing in the field of simulation-based learning, how it has come about and developed over time, and the different styles or approaches that are used and how effective the process is.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does Simulation-Based Medical Education With Deliberate Practice Yield Better Results Than Traditional Clinical Education? A Meta-Analytic Comparative Review of the Evidence

TL;DR: Although the number of reports analyzed in this meta-analysis is small, these results show that SBME with DP is superior to traditional clinical medical education in achieving specific clinical skill acquisition goals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Internet-based learning in the health professions: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: Internet-based learning is associated with large positive effects compared with no intervention and with non-Internet instructional methods, suggesting effectiveness similar to traditional methods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of a moderate dose of alcohol on simulated laparoscopic surgical performance.

TL;DR: Simulated surgical performance is impaired severely when estimated blood alcohol concentration (BAC) is just above the UK legal limit for driving, as assessed objectively on a laparoscopic surgical simulator.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using the Human Patient Simulator to Educate Students of Veterinary Medicine

TL;DR: The human patient simulator was a valuable learning tool for students of veterinary medicine that made them deal with "real-life" scenarios, permitted them to learn without subjecting live patients to complications, and facilitated correlation of their basic science knowledge with clinical data, thus accelerating their ability to handle complex clinical problems in healthy and diseased patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Score card endoscopy: a multicenter study to evaluate learning curves in 1-week courses using the Erlangen Endo-Trainer

TL;DR: A significant improvement in the learning curve was achieved in the beginners' group for the individual steps involved in diagnostic upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, when this approach is used with trainees who are also provided with the necessary theoretical background.
Journal Article

A cervical manikin procedure for chiropractic skills development.

TL;DR: The null hypothesis is accepted, and no significant difference in student examination performance was found between those who learned thrusting on the manikin alone and those who learn on fellow students, and for the first time, a manik in has been shown to be effective in teaching chiropractic skills.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delivering safe health care.

Paul Barach, +1 more
- 15 Sep 2001 - 
TL;DR: It is shown that preventable, iatrogenic injuries are being quantified and quantifiable and that the chronic “unsafeness” of health systems worldwide is being drawn attention.
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