| Literature DB >> 29449988 |
Roger Kneebone1, Sharon-Marie Weldon1, Fernando Bello1.
Abstract
This paper proposes simulation-based enactment of care as an innovative and fruitful means of engaging patients and clinicians to create collaborative solutions to healthcare issues. This use of simulation is a radical departure from traditional transmission models of education and training. Instead, we frame simulation as co-development, through which professionals, patients and publics share their equally (though differently) expert perspectives. The paper argues that a process of participatory design can bring about new insights and that simulation offers understandings that cannot easily be expressed in words. Drawing on more than a decade of our group's research on simulation and engagement, the paper summarises findings from studies relating to clinician-patient collaboration and proposes a novel approach to address the current need. The paper outlines a mechanism whereby pathways of care are jointly created, shaped, tested and refined by professionals, patients, carers and others who are affected and concerned by clinical care.Entities:
Keywords: Co-design; Co-development; Distributed simulation; Engagement; Sequential simulation; Simulation; Simulation-based re-enactment
Year: 2016 PMID: 29449988 PMCID: PMC5806370 DOI: 10.1186/s41077-016-0019-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Simul (Lond) ISSN: 2059-0628
Fig. 1Collaborative scenario development. From left to right: patient in GP practice; patient with pharmacist; patient at home confused taking new medication; patient attended by the paramedics in their ambulance
Fig. 2Series of simulation workshops. From left to right: asthmatic young person in A&E; diabetic patient having GP consultation; participants observing the simulation in action in a church setting; gastroscopy procedure for suspected oesophogeal cancer
Fig. 3Engaging with coronary angiography. Left: audience view. Right: close up of team, with audience members as patient (fourth from the left, reclining) and catheter lab assistant (third from the left)