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SimLEARN Beginnings. July, 2009: VA Under Secretary for Health established the Simulation Learning Education and Research Network (SimLEARN) ProgramSimLEARN will develop and manage a strategic and operating plan for simulation education, training, and research across VHAThe SimLEARN National Cent
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1. SimLEARN: Simulation Learning, Education and Research Network
Paula Molloy, PhD
SimLEARN National Program Manager
Rosalyn P. Scott, MD, MSHA
ACOS for Medical Education, Dayton VAMC
Professor of Surgery, Professor of Biomedical Industrial and
Human Factors Engineering, Wright State University
Rachel Ellaway, PhD
Assistant Dean Informatics
Northern Ontario School of Medicine
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2. SimLEARN Beginnings July, 2009: VA Under Secretary for Health established the Simulation Learning Education and Research Network (SimLEARN) Program
SimLEARN will develop and manage a strategic and operating plan for simulation education, training, and research across VHA
The SimLEARN National Center will be the focal point for program delivery
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3. The SimLEARNVision and Mission VISION: To improve the quality of health care services for America’s Veterans through the application of simulation based learning strategies to workforce development.
MISSION: To promote excellence in health care provided to America's Veterans through the use of simulation technologies for process modeling, training, education, and research and to establish VHA as the world leader in the application of simulation based strategies.
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4. Stakeholders and Governance The SimLEARN National Program will be responsible for the development and deployment of national curricula to address high priority clinical topics as identified by clinical stakeholders
A Steering Committee represents clinical stakeholder interests
The Steering Committee has met throughout 2009 and 2010 to provide early advice and guidance to the program
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5. SimLEARN NationalProgram Structure A VHA Employee Education System Program
Leadership Team – includes Patient Care Services and Office of Nursing
Simulation Educators
Information Technology
Research and Development
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6. SimLEARN Program Services Provide operational policies, procedures, standards and guidelines
Collaborate with the DoD, academic affiliates and others
Collaborate to define the business requirements for an IT infrastructure
Assist in specifications and best value choices for equipment and processes
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7. SimLEARN Center Products Survey to better understand the “as-is” state of VHA simulation training
Draft strategic plan
Edited volume— Simulation Update: A Review of Simulation-based Strategies for Healthcare, Education and Training
SimLEARN Newsletter
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8. SimLEARN Center Products www.simlearn.va.gov
Literature reviews/educational resources
Simulation Leadership conference
Exhibits at major VHA conferences
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9. The SimLEARN National CenterOrlando, FL Designed as a flexible facility for “train the trainer” simulation programs
Laboratory for developing optimal simulation-based strategies for VHA workforce
Multi-modal approaches will add to richness of the educational experience
Aspire to establish interconnectivity across system and between simulation modalities
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10. Using Simulation Rosalyn P. Scott, MD, MSHA
ACOS for Medical Education
Dayton VAMC
Professor of Surgery
Professor of Biomedical Industrial and
Human Factors Engineering
Wright State University
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11. Spectrum ofHealthcare Education This is where educators think that VPs fit
Greatest value is on decision making
Positive impact on learning
“Not only can VP cases illustrate multiple distinct presentations but deliberate practice can be facilitated by sequencing cases to insure an ideal case mix structuring learning to develop constituent skills and reinforce knowledge structures.”
“[Finally,] technology integration requires not only an effective technology tool but also a critical mass of educators trained in the technology’s use and an institutional culture supportive of the innovation.”This is where educators think that VPs fit
Greatest value is on decision making
Positive impact on learning
“Not only can VP cases illustrate multiple distinct presentations but deliberate practice can be facilitated by sequencing cases to insure an ideal case mix structuring learning to develop constituent skills and reinforce knowledge structures.”
“[Finally,] technology integration requires not only an effective technology tool but also a critical mass of educators trained in the technology’s use and an institutional culture supportive of the innovation.”
12. Simulation Theory Deliberate practice is essential for development of expert proficiency
Permission to fail allows learners to make mistakes and thus learn to recognize, avoid and recover from errors
Assessment tools allow learners to train-to-proficiency
Formative and summative feedback
Can be exposed to clinical scenarios that are uncommon in clinical training
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13. Fidelity Extent to which a simulator or simulation reflects the real world and patient
Necessary level and specific components of fidelity, may vary depending on the task
Simple procedural tasks, such as suturing and knot-tying, may be learned effectively with low-cost, lower-fidelity simulators
Complex tasks, such as a complete laparoscopic cholecystectomy or management of critically ill patients, may need a much higher level of realism.
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14. Virtual Patient An interactive computer simulation of real-life clinical scenarios for the purpose of medical training, education, or assessment. Users may be learners, teachers, or examiners.
Difficult and costly to author, adapt and share
Limited uptake and utility, despite being able to provide high quality learning opportunities
A standard to enable exchange across systems has the potential to scale their development and implementation across health professions education, including resource limited settings.
15. Branched Narrative 15
16. Virtual Patient Examples
17. MedBiquitous VirtualPatient Specification
18. eVIP Electronic Virtual Patients In 2005, European e-learning centers in medicine and healthcare formed a working group to define a standard for the interoperable use of VPs across Europe. Funded by European Commission in 2007 for 3 years.
Create a shared online bank of 320 VPs, adapted for multicultural and multilingual use
Promote the inter-professional sharing of VPs between different healthcare disciplines
Further enrich the content of the repurposed VPs with the addition of supporting resources
Implement common technical standards for all VPs in collaboration with MedBiquitous
19. Standardized Patients Trained to realistically portray a medical case complete with all parts of history and physical
20. Strengths of Standardized Patients Communication with patients, family, staff and colleagues; history and physical exam skills; clinical reasoning and decision making; ethical and professional behavior; and procedural skills.
Learners practice rare or high-risk conversations in a controlled environment
SPs provide the opportunity for detailed feedback from the perspective of the patient, promoting patient-centered care. 20
21. Task Trainers
22. Task Simulation Training, practice, and assessment of specific psychomotor skills.
Each specialty has its own roster skills
Maintain skills and acquire new skills in response to practice needs and introduction of new procedures or technology
Ultimate goal is the transfer of a learned psychomotor skill from the laboratory to the clinical environment 22
23. Haptics in Task Trainers Refers to sense of touch or force
Mechanical simulators have inherent haptic feedback, as they use real objects to simulate tasks
VR simulators have no inherent force feedback or haptics, as the environment is entirely generated within the computer.
VR simulators incorporate mechanisms to provide the learner with haptic feedback through special interfaces and equipment.
No evidence links haptics to improved clinical outcomes or to cost-effectiveness in laparoscopic trainers 23
24. Mannequins Range from passive mannequins to very complex computer-controlled mannequins with physiologic models
Can include part-task components allowing specific invasive procedures
Electronics in the neck allow an instructor or actor to speak as the “patient”
Do not object to being poked with needles, having tubes inserted, receiving injected drugs, or suffering lethal diseases
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25. In Situ Simulation Workforce is challenged in their own environment
Layout, equipment and supplies are used as they would be with real patients
Especially useful for unannounced mock events that can both train individuals and teams and probe the effectiveness of an institution’s clinical operating systems.
Costs are lower than with a dedicated center, where construction capital and operational funding are required
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26. Multidisciplinary Simulations Creates cross-discipline awareness of goals and issues.
Participants can exchange roles, a teaching technique that enhances the appreciation of the skills of colleagues
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27. Debriefing Reflect on what went well and what did not, and what lessons can be extracted
Explore and evaluate with participants the alternatives they had at various junctures of the scenario
Greater emphasis on participant-driven discussion and more inquiry/advocacy; less on instructor-driven critique
Aided by playback of video-recordings
Most important component in effective simulation-based clinical education 27
28. Immersive Environments Virtual worlds
Stereoscopic rear projected room with head/hand tracking
Incorporates gaming theory
29. Immersive Virtual Patient and Breast Examination Simulator
30. Technologies 3D virtual models of anatomical structures more sophisticated and form the basis for task training
Displays range from being head-mounted to complete rooms with life-size 3D representations
Social VEs are used as a platform for the education and training of medical professionals world wide
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31. Process Modeling A technique for using computers to imitate/simulate the operations of various kinds of real-world facilities or processes
Perform accurate, highly detailed predictive analyses of the specific and systemic impact of operational, process, and layout changes
Can provide deeper insights into the barriers and incentives to adoption 31
32. Optimizing Patient Stay in Emergency Department 32 After analyzing several possible changes to the ED process and resources such as beds, doctors, and nurses, it was determined that static resource allocation creates inefficient resource utilization – some resources are over-utilized and some are under-utilized. Furthermore, using simulation, it was found that real-time resource movement between process areas will minimize cost and still achieve the LOS goal.
This project demonstrated that computer modeling can be used as a real-time dashboard to assess status and make sound resource allocation decisions in real-time. The optimization of resources recommended by the model can lead to increased productivity by reducing LOS and enhancing the utilization of resources. A real-time dashboard provides “future-cast” capability, permitting the simulation of a future state based on the current state and contemplated changes.
After analyzing several possible changes to the ED process and resources such as beds, doctors, and nurses, it was determined that static resource allocation creates inefficient resource utilization – some resources are over-utilized and some are under-utilized. Furthermore, using simulation, it was found that real-time resource movement between process areas will minimize cost and still achieve the LOS goal.
This project demonstrated that computer modeling can be used as a real-time dashboard to assess status and make sound resource allocation decisions in real-time. The optimization of resources recommended by the model can lead to increased productivity by reducing LOS and enhancing the utilization of resources. A real-time dashboard provides “future-cast” capability, permitting the simulation of a future state based on the current state and contemplated changes.
33. SimLEARN National Center 33
34. HSVO: Simulation Integration Rachel Ellaway, PhD
Assistant Dean Informatics
Northern Ontario School of Medicine
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35. Simulation in Healthcare Education Safe environment - forgiving of mistakes
Trainee focused cf patient focused
Controlled, structured
Proactive clinical exposure
Reproducible, standardized, objective
Critical to patient and crew safety
36. Simulation in Healthcare Education Education, training, assessment
Part task trainers, box trainers and haptics
Mannequins - various ‘-fi’s
Simulated patients (actors)
Virtual patients and other OSS
Environments
… always with the centers!
37. Limitations Physical resources rivalrous
Online resources non-rivalrous
+ access, presence, integration & interoperability
Challenges of distributed programs, users, communities
Limited ROI and affordances of contemporary simulators
… mashup and continua cultures
38. Integration? Vendor platforms: METI müse
VP interoperability: MedBiquitous
Military sims HLA and SID
Augmentation – Kneebone - SPs + prosthetics
Integration – HSVO - devices and activities
39. Health Services Virtual Organization CANARIE funded project
Network-enabled platform - NEP
Connecting and controlling devices as services
Multi-site
Multi-disciplinary
Multi-year
40. HSVO Network
41. HSVO Connects
42. Services
43. HSVO Devices
44. HSVO NEP
45. HSVO In Use
47. HSVO Scenarios and Sessions Scenarios
Services
Rules
Sessions
Users and locations
Scheduling
1 scenario spawns multiple sessions
48. HSVO Scenarios
49. HSVO Scenarios
50. HSVO Scenarios
51. Multiple Scenarios and Sessions
52. HSVO Distributed-Integrated Simulation
53. HSVO Sim Challenge
54. Next Steps Improve workflows
BICF
New services
Extended services – esp camera arrays
New activity designs
Open source release
Evaluation and dissemination
55. What if? Simulation devices could be coordinated
Simulation devices could talk to each other
Simulation devices could control each other
Simulation devices could use services from elsewhere
Simulation devices could use each other as services
56. What if? Instructors and learners could have access to services and devices at any time and location
Instructors and learners could have access to on demand practice or instruction
All of this was easy to set up and control
All of this was open source
All of this was possible …
57. Questions? 57