Intraosseous infusion (IO) remains an underutilized technique for obtaining vascular access in adults, despite its potentially life-saving benefits in trauma patients. In rural and remote areas, shortage of training equipment and human capacity (i.e., simulators) are the main contributors to the shortage of local training courses aiming at the development and maintenance of IO skills. Specifically, current training equipment options available for trainees include commercially available simulators, which are often expensive, or animal tissues, which lack human anatomical features that are necessary for optimal learning and pose logistical and ethical issues related to practice on live animals. Three-dimensional (3D) printing provides the means to create cost-effective, anatomically correct simulators for practicing IO where existing simulators may be difficult to access, especially in remote areas. This technical report aims to describe the development of maxSIMIO, a 3D-printed adult proximal tibia IO simulator, and present feedback on the design features from a clinical co-design team consisting of 18 end-point users. Overall, the majority of the feedback was positive and highlighted that the maxSIMIO simulator was helpful for learning and developing the IO technique. The majority of the clinical team responders also agreed that the simulator was more anatomically accurate compared to other simulators they have used in the past. Finally, the survey results indicated that on average, the simulator is acceptable as a training tool. Notable suggestions for improvement included increasing the stability of the individual parts of the model (such as tightening the skin and securing the bones), enhancing the anatomical accuracy of the experience (such as adding a fibula), making the bones harder, increasing the size of the patella, making it more modular (to minimize costs related to maintenance), and improving the anatomical positioning of the knee joint (i.e., slightly bent in the knee joint). In summary, the clinical team, located in rural and remote areas in Canada, found the 3D-printed simulator to be a functional tool for practicing the intraosseous technique. The outcome of this report supports the use of this cost-effective simulator for simulation-based medical education for remote and rural areas anywhere in the world.
Simulation-based education (SBE) is a sustainable method to allow healthcare professionals to develop competencies in clinical skills that can be difficult to maintain in rural and remote settings. Simulationbased skills training is necessary for healthcare professionals that experience difficulties accessing skills development and maintenance courses to address the needs of rural communities. However, simulators, a key element of simulation, are often prohibitively expensive and follow a "one-size-fits-all" approach. Using additive manufacturing (AM) techniques, more specifically three-dimensional (3D) printing, to produce inexpensive yet functional and customizable simulators is an ideal solution for learners to practice and improve their procedural skills anywhere and anytime. AM allows for the customization of simulators to fit any context while reducing costs and is an economic solution that moves away from the use of animal products to a more ethical, sustainable method for training. This technical report describes the delivery of a fundamental skills workshop to provide hands-on training to rural and remote healthcare professionals using 3D-printed simulators purposefully designed following design-to-cost principles. The workshop was delivered at a three-hour session hosted at a rural and remote medicine course in Ottawa, Canada. The workshop consisted of four technical skills: suturing, cricothyrotomy, episiotomy, and intraosseous infusion (tibial) (IO) and used a blended learning approach to train healthcare professionals and trainees who practice in rural and remote areas. In addition, the learners were granted access to a custom-designed learning management system, which provided a repository of instructional materials, and enabled them to record and upload personal practice sessions, review other learners' practice sessions, collaborate, and provide feedback to other learners. The feedback collected from participants, instructors, and observations on the delivery of the workshop will help improve the structure and training provided to learners. The delivery of this workshop annually is an ideal solution to ensure parsimonious delivery of simulation training for rural and remote healthcare professionals.
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