| Literature DB >> 27079898 |
Simon Watmough1, Helen Box2, Nick Bennett3, Alison Stewart4, Michael Farrell5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preparing medical students with the skills necessary to deal with emergency situations as junior doctors can be challenging due to the complexities of creating authentic 'real life' experiences in artificial environments. The following paper is an evaluation of the UMUST (Unexpected Medical Undergraduate Simulation Training) project; a high-fidelity simulation based training programme designed to emulate the experience of dealing with medical emergencies for final year medical students preparing for practice as Foundation Year trainees.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical skills; Preparedness for practice; Utilising simulation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27079898 PMCID: PMC4832521 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0629-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
The score generated on completion of each UMUST
| Scenario (in order of which they were carried out) | Scenario Score with percentage score in brackets | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group one St Helens & Knowsley | Group one Blackpool | Group two St Helens & Knowsley | Group two Blackpool | Group three St Helens & Knowsley | Group three Blackpool | Group four St Helens & Knowsley | Group four Blackpool | |
| Dehydration 44 Maximum Score | 24 (54 %) | 20 (45 %) | 14 (32 %) | 27 (61 %) | 20 (45 %) | 21 (48 %) | 15 (34 %) | 16 (36 %) |
| Opiate Overdose 50 Maximum Score | 26 (52 %) | 31 (62 %) | 25 (50 %) | 31 (62 %) | 26 (52 %) | 33 (66 %) | 25 (50 %) | 32 (64 %) |
| COPD, Pneumonia 52 Maximum Score | 30 (58 %) | 30 (58 %) | 22 (42 %) | 29 (56 %) | 12 (23 %) | 39 (75 %) | 27 (52 %) | Cancelled |
| Sepsis 42 Maximum Score | 26 (62 %) | 29 (69 %) | 27 (64 %) | 24 (58 %) | 13 (30 %) | 27 (64 %) | 25 (60 %) | 27 (64 %) |
Summaries of free text responses from the questionnaire
| Do you think the UMUST programme has helped your approach to real life unplanned emergencies? If yes, How do you think your experience of UMUST changed or helped you with the management of that situation? | Can you give examples of how UMUST has helped your approach to real life unplanned medical emergencies? | How has UMUST been useful in preparing you to work as a Foundation Trainee? | Did you find the debriefing sessions useful? | How do you think UMUST could be improved for future cohorts of students? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of FY1 trainees citing this in brackets/summary of comments | Number of FY1 trainees citing this in brackets/summary of comments | Number of FY1 trainees citing this in brackets/summary of comments | Number of FY1 trainees citing this in brackets/summary of comments | Number of FY1 trainees citing this in brackets/summary of comments |
| (5) Experience of ABCDE, UMUST scenarios when called to patients. | (7) Being more confident in ABCDE approach when starting as an FY1 | (7) UMUST encouraged teamwork | (4) it was useful to learn from seeing errors | (6) More UMUST sessions |
| (4) Teamwork, less panic when faced with these situations. | (5) Working in a team | (4) Gives experience of ABCDE | (3) It encouraged reflection, | (2) Introduce a more multidisciplinary approach (e.g., students nurses) and shorten the de briefing |
| (3) Increased confidence, less panic holding a hospital pager. | (3) Gives confidence generally | (3) Gives experience of common scenarios FY1 doctors encounter | (2) It was useful to see how treatment can be streamlined, teamwork | (1) make calls to doctor more senior to us, make all students do it, give strict roles to students to stop people doing the same roles each time, have a GI bleed scenario, have 2 scenarios in a week, more input from senior clinicians, use more defibrillators, put summary of scenarios completed in the portfolio, make participants assess themselves, allow the staff to run through the first one with students, tell some wards to be more forgiving for students attending UMUST. |
| (2) Managing acutely ill patients, increases knowledge | (2) Gives structure when seeing patients | (2) being on call, crash bleep, provides a template for initial assessment of unwell patients | ||
| (1) Resuscitation, just knowing what to do as an FY1, uses UMUST to deal with cardiac arrests, invaluable to practice in a safe environment, can think outside the box when seeing patients, structure to fall back on if unsure. | (1) helps with arrest calls, gives skills to stabilise patients before a senior arrives, can manage an emergency single handed, guides further learning, shows communication is vital, helps at paged calls, wearing gloves as directed by UMUST, initial assessment of unwell patient, recognises common diagnoses, similar scenarios were seen, gives a chance to go through emotions like fear and excitement. | (1)resuscitation, human factors, experience of emergency calls, communication skills, decision making, recognised limitations/know when to call for help, helps stay calm, seeing similar scenarios, gives a system to use when unsure what to do. | (1) Highlights personal strengths and weaknesses, useful to see improvements over the scenarios, can identify learning goals, good but would be better to have senior clinicians there, gives experience of being stressed. |