Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Aug;28(8):1078-89. doi: 10.1007/s11606-012-2264-5.
Evaluating the patient impact of health professions education is a societal priority with many challenges. Researchers would benefit from a summary of topics studied and potential methodological problems. We sought to summarize key information on patient outcomes identified in a comprehensive systematic review of simulation-based instruction.
Systematic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsychINFO, Scopus, key journals, and bibliographies of previous reviews through May 2011.
Original research in any language measuring the direct effects on patients of simulation-based instruction for health professionals, in comparison with no intervention or other instruction.
Two reviewers independently abstracted information on learners, topics, study quality including unit of analysis, and validity evidence. We pooled outcomes using random effects.
From 10,903 articles screened, we identified 50 studies reporting patient outcomes for at least 3,221 trainees and 16,742 patients. Clinical topics included airway management (14 studies), gastrointestinal endoscopy (12), and central venous catheter insertion (8). There were 31 studies involving postgraduate physicians and seven studies each involving practicing physicians, nurses, and emergency medicine technicians. Fourteen studies (28 %) used an appropriate unit of analysis. Measurement validity was supported in seven studies reporting content evidence, three reporting internal structure, and three reporting relations with other variables. The pooled Hedges' g effect size for 33 comparisons with no intervention was 0.47 (95 % confidence interval [CI], 0.31-0.63); and for nine comparisons with non-simulation instruction, it was 0.36 (95 % CI, -0.06 to 0.78).
Focused field in education; high inconsistency (I(2) > 50 % in most analyses).
Simulation-based education was associated with small-moderate patient benefits in comparison with no intervention and non-simulation instruction, although the latter did not reach statistical significance. Unit of analysis errors were common, and validity evidence was infrequently reported.
评估医学专业教育对患者的影响是一个具有诸多挑战的社会重点。研究人员需要了解该领域的研究主题和潜在方法问题。我们旨在总结一项基于模拟教学的全面系统评价中确定的患者结局相关的关键信息。
通过 2011 年 5 月之前的 MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsychINFO、Scopus、主要期刊和先前综述的参考文献系统检索。
任何语言的原始研究,均需测量比较健康专业人员基于模拟教学的直接对患者的影响,对照无干预或其他教学。
两位评审员独立提取学习者、主题、研究质量(包括分析单位)和有效性证据方面的信息。我们使用随机效应汇总结果。
在筛选出的 10903 篇文章中,我们确定了 50 项研究,共涉及至少 3221 名受训者和 16742 名患者的患者结局。临床主题包括气道管理(14 项研究)、胃肠内镜检查(12 项)和中心静脉导管插入术(8 项)。有 31 项研究涉及研究生医生,7 项研究涉及执业医生,7 项研究涉及护士,还有 4 项研究涉及急诊医学技师。14 项研究(28 %)使用了适当的分析单位。有 7 项研究报告了内容证据、3 项研究报告了内部结构、3 项研究报告了与其他变量的关系,从而为测量有效性提供了支持。与无干预比较的 33 项比较的 Hedges' g 效应量大小为 0.47(95 %置信区间[CI],0.31-0.63);与非模拟教学比较的 9 项比较的效应量大小为 0.36(95 % CI,-0.06 至 0.78)。
教育领域重点集中;高度不一致(大多数分析中 I(2) > 50 %)。
与无干预和非模拟教学相比,基于模拟的教育与较小至中等程度的患者获益相关,尽管后者没有达到统计学显著性。分析单位错误较为常见,有效性证据很少报告。