The COVID-19 pandemic has necessitated a transition from traditional face-to-face teaching to virtual equivalents, sometimes at the expense of teaching quality and student engagement Our aim was to demonstrate the feasibility of a novel gamified online simulation approach to teaching the management of acutely unwell patients.Using elements of gamification and interactive film, this virtual session was designed to teach prospective medical students the ‘A to E’ approach of managing an acutely unwell patient. The management of an acutely unwell patient is an iterative and dynamic process that requires one to manage uncertainty and constantly re-evaluate the clinical situation. The session was designed using interactive film, with students given the ability to influence a clinician’s actions and subsequent changes of clinical scenario dictated by student live-vote. This interactive and engaging approach allowed students to reflect-in-action and be active learners, in line with an experiential pedagogy Students attended a live session using a video conferencing service (Zoom) and their responses to clinical scenarios were recorded using an online voting tool (Mentimeter). Students were provided with a case history of an unwell patient and presented with an opening video. The session required video options to be pre-recorded to reflect the numerous potential avenues within the scenario as dictated by the students’ chosen actions. Depending on overall student voting consensus, pre-recorded videos of the clinician’s actions and changes to the clinical scenario were subsequently shown. For example, if the appropriate clinical action was selected, students would progress through the A-E approach. Students effectively guided the clinician to manage the unwell patient, with iterative and real-time feedback provided throughout the scenario. The session was concluded with a debrief, explanation of the case and key learning points.
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in an unprecedented shift from face-to-face to online teaching with a subsequent deleterious impact on the quality of teaching delivery within medical education Our aim was to demonstrate the feasibility of utilizing a novel approach to interactive, online simulated history-taking.The session was designed for students attending a virtual work-experience programme and is founded upon gamification principles. History-taking is a humanistic social process requiring effective communication skills and recognition of verbal and non-verbal cues. The session enabled students to directly instruct a passive clinician to take a history from a simulated patient actor, incorporating both verbal and non-verbal actions. This novel teaching method is analogous to Freire’s work, highlighting the importance of the learner being an active participant, thus enabling experiential learning This interactive approach required a simulated patient actor, a passive clinician and a verbal instructor to be present. Students were presented with a case scenario and viewed the interaction between the simulated patient actor and passive clinician online via a video conferencing service (in this case, Zoom). Students provided instructions to the passive clinician using the typed chat function. These typed instructions were relayed by the verbal instructor to the passive clinician via an earpiece and the passive clinician would then embody these instructions. This allowed students to work as a group to directly elicit a history and witness their instructions being actioned. Examples of instructions included questions to verbalize, adjustments to body language and alteration of the tone of voice. Following good student instruction, the passive clinician gradually grew in competence and confidence throughout the scenario, thus allowing real-time, interactive feedback of their history-taking approach. The session concluded with a reflection of the communication traits that helped to gain an effective history from the patient using a debrief model.
The transition to a foundation doctor is often a daunting process for medical students and, to prepare for this, students attend an assistantship placement in the final months of medical school. The transition to foundation year 1 (TTF1) programme is an 8-week placement where students shadow a junior doctor, taking on a vocational role, and attend various teaching activities including high-fidelity simulation. Evidence suggests that medical students transitioning to clinical practice feel unprepared for working on-call, managing acutely unwell patients and task prioritization, and are often unprepared for scenarios requiring expert communication techniques We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a redesigned simulation programme for TTF1 students, focussing on student satisfaction, confidence and attitudes across key domains.Fifty-three TTF1 students attended a 1-day high-fidelity simulation training day, separated into cohorts of 10 students. Students completed a pre-course (In terms of confidence, there was an improvement across all core domains, namely diagnosing and managing acute medical emergencies (2.8 vs. 3.8), performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (3.0 vs. 3.6) and working effectively with colleagues in the interests of the patient (3.3 vs. 4.2). 96% of students found that simulation was a valuable learning experience, allowing them to integrate theory with practice. 94% of students felt that the simulation allowed them to analyse their behaviours and actions and 88% found that scenarios resembled real-world situations. Attitudes towards simulation were positive, with 92% of students agreeing that simulation is a good way of learning technical and non-technical skills. Qualitative themes focussed on the real-world applicability of the scenarios, increased confidence in task prioritization, closed-loop communication and early escalation.We have demonstrated the benefit of integrating simulation training within the assistantship period and the value of creating novel scenarios directly related to future practice as a junior doctor.
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