Lu Wei-Hsin, Goolsarran Nirvani, Hamo Carine E, Frawley Stacey M, Rowe Colby, Lane Susan
Research Assistant Professor, Stony Brook University School of Medicine.
Academic Hospitalist, Stony Brook University School of Medicine.
MedEdPORTAL. 2016 Jun 3;12:10409. doi: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10409.
Teaching and learning patient safety require demonstration of competencies such as teamwork, communication skills, and recognition of systems error. This patient safety TBL simulation-training program was developed to fulfill core patient safety objectives outlined by the ACGME and ACGME Clinical Learning Environment Review Program. The goal of the program is to enhance patient safety and quality care concepts and facilitate hands-on teamwork skills and core attitudes towards patient safety. This program served as a mandatory part of the residency core curriculum.
It was delivered as a 3-hour workshop session during medicine resident orientation. The workshop included an introductory presentation, one TBL activity, and three 1-hour interprofessional simulated application cases using either high-fidelity mannequins or standardized patients. Following each application case activity, trainees participated in a postcase scenario debriefing moderated by faculty facilitators.
A total of 76 trainees participated, and 20 interprofessional teams were created. An independent-samples t test revealed that the Group Readiness Assurance Test scores were significantly higher than the Individual Readiness Assurance Test scores. Although the Readiness for Interprofessional Learning Survey's Teamwork and Professional Identity subscale scores were higher postworkshop compared to preworkshop, the differences were not statistically significant. Over 90% of the participants agreed that the safety concepts they learned would likely improve the quality of care they provide to future patients.
A simulation model centered on an interprofessional team can be used as an important training technique to teach health care professionals realistic, hands-on principles of patient safety.
教授和学习患者安全需要展示团队合作、沟通技巧和对系统错误的识别等能力。这个患者安全团队基础学习(TBL)模拟培训项目的开发是为了实现美国研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)和ACGME临床学习环境评审项目所概述的核心患者安全目标。该项目的目标是强化患者安全和优质护理概念,并促进实际操作的团队合作技能以及对患者安全的核心态度。这个项目是住院医师核心课程的必修部分。
它在医学住院医师入职培训期间作为一个3小时的工作坊课程进行。该工作坊包括一个介绍性演讲、一个TBL活动,以及三个使用高仿真人体模型或标准化患者的1小时跨专业模拟应用案例。在每个应用案例活动之后,学员们参与由教员主持的案例后情景汇报。
共有76名学员参与,组建了20个跨专业团队。独立样本t检验显示,小组准备度保证测试分数显著高于个人准备度保证测试分数。尽管跨专业学习准备度调查的团队合作和专业认同子量表分数在工作坊后比工作坊前更高,但差异无统计学意义。超过90%的参与者同意他们学到的安全概念可能会提高他们为未来患者提供的护理质量。
以跨专业团队为中心的模拟模型可以作为一种重要的培训技术,向医疗保健专业人员传授现实的、实际操作的患者安全原则。