| Literature DB >> 21943295 |
Debra Nestel1, Diana Tabak, Tanya Tierney, Carine Layat-Burn, Anja Robb, Susan Clark, Tracy Morrison, Norma Jones, Rachel Ellis, Cathy Smith, Nancy McNaughton, Kerry Knickle, Jenny Higham, Roger Kneebone.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The literature on simulated or standardized patient (SP) methodology is expanding. However, at the level of the program, there are several gaps in the literature. We seek to fill this gap through documenting experiences from four programs in Australia, Canada, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. We focused on challenges in SP methodology, faculty, organisational structure and quality assurance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21943295 PMCID: PMC3189900 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-11-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Drivers for uptake of simulated patient-based education
| • Raised profile of patient perspectives and patient empowerment |
| • Ethical imperative of causing no harm to patients |
| • Implementation of working time directives |
| • Prominence of the patient safety movement |
| • Increased numbers of medical and health professional students |
| • Reduced hospital stays for patients |
| • Growing evidence of simulation as an effective educational method |
| • Growing evidence that effective health professional/patient communication is key to patient and clinician (learner) satisfaction and reduces litigation |
| • Development of national assessments |
| • Facilitates a systematic approach to curriculum activities |
| • Development of 'professional' competencies |
| • Carefully constructed simulations |
| ○ Assure students have direct/indirect exposure |
| ○ Allow for adjustment in the level of challenge |
| ○ Identify boundaries of competence |
| ○ Provide access to technical, communication and other professional skills essential for safe clinical practice |
| ○ Enable rehearsal of infrequently occurring events |
| ○ Assure the development of reflective practice (video, debriefing) |
Summary of simulated patient programs
| Gippsland Medical School | University of Toronto | University of Applied Sciences, Section Health Lausanne | Imperial College London | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Program established | 2008 | 1984 | 2009 | 1998 |
| Numbers of SPs on register | 45 | 592 | 38 | 260 |
| Recruitment strategy | Personal referral | Personal referral/word of mouth | Personal referral/word of mouth | Register online |
| Training program | Minimum 2-hour generic introductory SP training | Minimum 2-hour training, brush-up or dry-run for teaching and assessment assignments | Minimum 5-hour training for teaching and assessment activities | New SPs may undergo training - minimum 2-hour training |
| Principal focus | Teaching and assessment of medical students, international medical graduates and other health professionals in the region | Teaching and assessment of medical students, pharmacy students, international medical graduates | Teaching and assessment of health professional students (radiologic technology, nursing, physiotherapy and midwifery) | Teaching and assessment of medical students |
| Funding model | University funded for teaching and assessment undergraduate students | Fee for service | University funded for teaching and assessment undergraduate students | University funded for teaching and assessment of medical students |
| Hourly pay | ~AUD23 per hour | CdnD15-25 per hour depending on assignment | CHF 30 per hour for teaching without feedback and assessment | GBP30 per hour for teaching |
| Research | Roles and responsibilities of SPs; Theoretical underpinning from performing arts and theatre studies; SP-based education for international medical graduates | Patient focused simulation for procedural skills; | Effects of SP feedback; | Patient-focused simulation for procedural and operative skills; Training methods for patient-focused simulation; |
| Future plans | Expand to other health care professions | Increase work with international medical graduate specialties | Extend the SP pool | Improve co-ordination across |
Summary data of simulated patients on databases
| Gippsland Medical School | University of Toronto | Lausanne | Imperial College | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 22 | 257 | 9 | 120 |
| Female | 36 | 332 | 29 | 140 |
| Mean age | 50 | 38 | 45 | 50 |
| Age range | 10 - 84 | 12 -89 | 20-75 | 19 - 65 |
| Under 16 years | 1 | 30 | None | None |
| First language | 100% | 97% | 99% | 98% |
| Fluent in other languages | 3% | 17% | 2% | 20% |
| British Sign Language/Makaton/Other | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3% |
Categories of simulated (standardised) patients
| 1. Volunteers (Gippsland, Imperial): |
| a. Play a role that is based on their own experience [ |
| b. Are drawn from local community |
| c. Are unpaid |
| d. Have different levels of training in case portrayal and feedback skills |
| 2. Physical examination role players (Imperial, Lausanne): |
| a. Play a given role with minimal speaking since the focus is on assessment of students in physical examination |
| b. Are drawn from local community/drawn from clinical cases which showed learning obstacles for students |
| c. Are paid |
| d. Have different levels of training |
| 3. SPs (Gippsland, Imperial, Toronto, Lausanne): |
| a. Play roles in teaching, assessments and research |
| b. May or may not have formal acting or performance training |
| c. Undergo training as SPs in case portrayal and feedback skills |
| d. Are paid an established hourly rate |
Content of simulated (standardized) patient databases
| Name | Level of education |