SIMNOVA-Interdepartment Centre for Innovative Teaching and Simulation in Medicine and the Health Professions (Centro Interdipartimentale di Didattica Innovativa e di Simulazione in Medicina e Professioni Sanitarie), University of Eastern Piedmont, Novara, Italy.
Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Humanitas Clinical Research Center - IRCCS, Milan, Italy.
Med Educ. 2020 Mar;54(3):254-263. doi: 10.1111/medu.14050. Epub 2020 Feb 7.
The present study explored how challenge and threat responses to stress relate to performance, anxiety, confidence, team identity and team characteristics (time spent in training and postgraduate experience) in a medical simulation-based team competition.
The study was conducted during a national simulation-based training event for residents, the SIMCUP Italia 2018. The SIMCUP is a simulation competition in which teams of four compete in simulated medical emergency scenarios. Cross-sectional data were collected prior to the 3 days of the competition. Subjects included 95 participants on 24 teams. Before the competition on each day, participants completed brief self-report measures that assessed demands and resources (which underpin challenge and threat responses to stress), cognitive and somatic anxiety, self-confidence and team identification. Participants also reported time (hours) spent practising as a team and years of postgraduate experience. A team of referees judged each scenario for performance and assigned a score. A linear mixed model using demands and resources was built to model performance.
The data showed that both demands and resources have positive effects on performance (31 [11-50.3] [P < .01] and 54 [25-83.3] [P < .01] percentage points increase for unitary increases in demands and resources, respectively); however, this is balanced by a negative interaction between the two (demands * resources interaction coefficient = -10 [-16 to -4.2]). A high level of resources is associated with better performance until demands become very high. Cognitive and somatic anxieties were found to be correlated with demands (Pearson's r = .51 [P < .01] and Pearson's r = .48 [P < .01], respectively). Time spent training was associated with greater perceptions of resources (Pearson's r = .36 [P < .01]).
We describe a model of challenge and threat that allows for the estimation of performance according to perceived demands and resources, and the interaction between the two. Higher levels of resources and lower demands were associated with better performance.
本研究旨在探讨在基于医学模拟的团队竞赛中,压力下的挑战和威胁反应如何与表现、焦虑、信心、团队认同和团队特征(培训时间和研究生经验)相关。
该研究在 2018 年意大利 SIMCUP 全国模拟培训活动期间进行。SIMCUP 是一项模拟竞赛,由四个团队的成员在模拟医疗紧急情况下进行竞争。在竞赛的 3 天前收集了横断面数据。研究对象包括 24 个团队的 95 名参与者。在每天竞赛开始前,参与者完成了简短的自我报告测量,评估了需求和资源(这是压力下挑战和威胁反应的基础)、认知和躯体焦虑、自信和团队认同。参与者还报告了团队练习的时间(小时)和研究生经验的年限。一个裁判团队为每个场景的表现进行评分。使用需求和资源构建了一个线性混合模型来模拟表现。
数据显示,需求和资源都对表现有积极影响(单位需求和资源增加 31 [11-50.3] [P <.01]和 54 [25-83.3] [P <.01],分别);然而,这被两者之间的负交互作用所平衡(需求*资源交互系数=-10 [-16 至-4.2])。高资源水平与更好的表现相关,直到需求变得非常高。认知和躯体焦虑与需求呈正相关(皮尔逊 r=0.51 [P <.01]和皮尔逊 r=0.48 [P <.01])。培训时间与资源感知呈正相关(皮尔逊 r=0.36 [P <.01])。
我们描述了一个挑战和威胁的模型,根据感知的需求和资源以及两者之间的相互作用,可以估计表现。更高的资源水平和更低的需求与更好的表现相关。