| Literature DB >> 36135980 |
Ibrahim AlBalawi1, Jaber S Alqahtani2, Shouq S Al Ghamdi3, Abdulelah M Aldhahir4, Musallam Alnasser2, Abdullah S Alqahtani2, Saad M AlRabeeah2, Mohammed Alkhathami2, Thekra N Almaqati5, Ibrahim A AlDraiwiesh2, Ameera K Al Onezei6, Arulanantham Zechariah Jebakumar7, Yahya A Alzahrani8, Tope Oyelade9, Eidan M Alzahrani10.
Abstract
Background: Simulation-based education (SBE) provides a safe, effective, and stimulating environment for training medical and healthcare students. This is especially valuable for skills that cannot be practiced on real patients due to ethical and practical reasons. We aimed to assess medical students' attitude, perception, and experience of simulation-based medical education in Saudi Arabia. Method: A validated cross-sectional survey, using the KidSIM scale, was conducted to measure the level of perception and experience of students from different health sciences specialties toward integrating simulation as an educational tool. Participants responded to questions investigated the importance of simulation, opportunities for Inter-Professional Education (IPE), communication, roles and responsibilities, and situation awareness. Only students with previous experience of SBE were considered for participation. Result: This survey was completed by 246 participants, of whom 165 (67%) were male students and 228 (93%) were aged between the range of 18-30 years old. Of the respondents, 104 (67%) were respiratory care students, 90 (37%) were anesthesia technology students, and 45 (18%) were nursing students. Most of the participants had previous experience in IPE simulation activities (84%), and more than half of the students (54%) had a grade point average (GPA) ranging between 5.00 and 4.50. Overall, students had positive attitudes toward and beliefs about SBE, with a mean score of 129.76 ± 14.27, on the KidSIM scale, out of 150. Students' GPA was significantly associated with a better perception to the relevance of simulation (p = 0.005), communication (p = 0.003), roles and responsibilities (p = 0.04), and situation awareness (p = 0.009). GPA is merely the sole predictor for positive attitude toward simulation with coefficient Beta value of 4.285 (p = 0.001). There were no significant correlations between other students' characteristic variables (gender, specialty, study year, experience in IPE, and prior critical care experience).Entities:
Keywords: health sciences education; higher education; learning; nursing; simulations; teaching
Year: 2022 PMID: 36135980 PMCID: PMC9501630 DOI: 10.3390/nursrep12030061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Rep ISSN: 2039-439X
Demographics and background characteristics of the students (N = 246).
| Variable | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Male | 165 (67%) |
| Female | 81 (33%) |
|
| |
| 18–30 | 228 (93%) |
| 31–40 | 16 (7%) |
| 41–50 | 2 (1%) |
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| RC | 104 (42%) |
| EMS | 7 (3%) |
| ANES | 90 (37%) |
| Nursing | 45 (18%) |
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| Second year | 70 (28%) |
| Third year | 79 (32%) |
| Fourth year | 60 (24%) |
| Internship | 37 (15%) |
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| 5.00–4.50 | 132 (54%) |
| 4.49–3.75 | 94 (38%) |
| 3.74–2.75 | 15 (6%) |
| 2.74–2.00 | 3 (1%) |
| Less than 2.00 | 2 (1%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 206 (84%) |
| No | 40 (16%) |
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| Workshop | 84 (24%) |
| Seminar | 92 (26%) |
| Course | 121 (35%) |
| Work Experience | 52 (15%) |
|
| |
| None | 114 (46%) |
| <1 week | 49 (20%) |
| <2 week | 12 (5%) |
| <3 week | 17 (7%) |
| 1 month | 11 (4%) |
| >1 month | 43 (17%) |
Attitudes, perceptions, and experiences using educational simulation in Saudi Arabia.
| Item | Mean ± SD |
|---|---|
|
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| 1. Simulation is a good environment for learning with other health care professionals |
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| 2. Simulation supports opportunities to change attitudes |
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| 3. Opportunities to practice teamwork can help students learn about inter-professional roles |
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| 4. Opportunities to learn with other health care professionals has increased my understanding of their roles |
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| 5. Simulation is a good tool for practicing team decision-making skills |
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| 6. Deliberate practice can improve clinical decision-making skills |
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| 7. Learning with other professionals is important to collaboration |
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| 8. Opportunities to learn with other professionals should be a priority in my education |
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| 9. I want more opportunities to learn with other professionals |
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| 10. Shared learning with other team members will improve my ability to understand clinical problems |
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| 11. Attitudes about teamwork can change through opportunities to work with other professionals in simulation |
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| 12. Learning with other health care professionals before qualification is important for the development of future inter-professional relationships |
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| 13. Interprofessional opportunities for learning will improve patient outcomes |
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| 14. All students should learn how to work in the context of health care teams |
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| 15. Team leaders should provide frequent patient updates to other team members |
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| 16. Team leaders should encourage team members to ask questions |
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| 17. Communication within the team is as important as technical skills |
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| 18. Team members providing immediate patient care management should verbalize their activities aloud |
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| 19. Team members should paraphrase or repeat back instructions to clarify their understanding |
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| 20. Communication in teamwork is important to patient safety |
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| 21. The roles of non-leading members of the team are just as important for good team functioning as the role of the leader |
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| 22. Teamwork practice will provide me with feedback to enhance my ability to provide optimal patient care |
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| 23. Monitoring what each team member is doing is important to optimize patient safety |
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| 24. Will enhance other team members understanding of my role in patient health care |
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| 25. Teamwork practice will help me recognize how best to help other team members complete their tasks |
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| 26. It is important for team members to ask for assistance if they need support in completing a task |
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| 27. Teamwork practice allows for flexibility in roles during times of crisis |
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| 28. I will speak up if I perceive a problem regardless of who might be affected |
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| 29. Patient care is improved when all team members have a shared understanding of the assessment and treatment |
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| 30. Team leaders should provide frequent summaries of patient findings to keep team members oriented to patient needs |
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BOLD indicates the main domains for the survey.
The mean total of the students’ scores on the five subscales of the KidSIM questionnaire.
| Type of the Items | Number of Items | Sub Scale Potential Range | Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relevance of Simulation | 6 | 6–30 | 26.00 (3.22) |
| Opportunities for Inter professional Education (IPE) | 7 | 7–35 | 29.95 (3.83) |
| Communication | 8 | 8–40 | 34.59 (4.36) |
| Roles and Responsibilities | 6 | 6–30 | 26.08 (3.50) |
| Situation Awareness | 3 | 3–15 | 13.14 (1.71) |
| Total | 30 | 30–150 | 129.76 (14.27) |
Predictors of positive students’ attitudes and perception toward simulation.
| Variables | Beta (95%CI) | SEM | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constant | 113.418 (98.314–128.523) | 7.668 | 0.001 |
| Gender | −4.453 (−9.365–0.458) | 2.493 | 0.075 |
| Specialty | −0.605 (−2.795–1.585) | 1.112 | 0.587 |
| Current study year | 1.756 (−0.07–3.582) | 0.927 | 0.059 |
| GPA | 4.285 (1.828–6.741) | 1.247 | 0.001 |
| Experience in Interprofessional Education simulation | −0.26 (−5.066–4.546) | 2.44 | 0.915 |
| Critical Care Experience | −1.066 (−2.247–0.115) | 0.6 | 0.077 |