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Improving undergraduate patient safety teaching using a simulated ward round experience. Mr Ian Thomas Clinical Teaching Fellow. Background. Medical error is common Most occur on hospital wards As a result of human factors Distractions play a major role
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Improving undergraduate patient safety teaching using a simulated ward round experience Mr Ian Thomas Clinical Teaching Fellow
Background • Medical error is common • Most occur on hospital wards • As a result of human factors • Distractions play a major role • Ward rounds have lost their importance
Innovation Simulated ward round experience for final year medical students at the UoA Focus is on medical error and distraction
Why is this important? • Potential to improve patient safety. • New doctors do not feel prepared for graduation. • Currently we teach non-technical skills didactically rather than practically. • Simulation is the only safe way to practically train undergraduates in these skills. • The WHO and GMC are calling for this style of training. • First study to assess change in patient safety behaviours in medical undergraduates.
Student = FY1 • Lead the ward round: diagnosis & management plans • Staff nurse • Accompanies ward round – handover of patients Ward round has a number of error-prone tasks built in! • Volunteer patients • 3 patients with medical & surgical problems
Number of medical errors and management of distractions recorded Deployment of distractions
Method Prospective control study Intervention group Control group N = 14 Pre-test WR N = 14 Pre-test WR Sept 2013 Nov 2013 Feedback on distraction management No feedback N = 14 Post-test WR N = 14 Post-test WR Oct 2013 Dec 2013
Results 168 patient encounters and 28 hours of simulation
Spearman’s co-efficient = 0.663 P-value = 0.01
42% 76% 68% 33% < 0.0001 < 0.0001 0.0001 0.0108
Simulation with feedback confers a 1.8 fold benefit in medical error making P-value = 0.0016
2% improvement P-value 0.7929 86% improvement P-value <0.0001
Student acceptability • 27/28 students completed electronic questionnaire on the experience. • Highly acceptable and valued. Survey Monkey 2013
Discussion • Medical students are not inherently equipped to manage distractions to mitigate error. • These skills are required for safe foundation doctor practice. • Didactic teaching fails to teach these skills to students. • These skills can readily be taught through simulation. • Simulation with feedback is critical to gain most benefit.
Recommendation • Consider integrating this experience into the final year curriculum • Cost of 1 day of simulation = £100 – 400 • Cost of simulation/student = £7.14 - 28.50 • Arguably cost-effective teaching tool • Modalities to increase student capacity & reduce faculty burden exist • Further research opportunities exist and should be explored