Grosgogeat Claire A, Medwid Kelly, Mahmoud Rami H, Hensley Brooke
University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami, Department of Emergency Medicine, Miami, FL.
J Educ Teach Emerg Med. 2024 Jul 31;9(3):S1-S29. doi: 10.21980/J8293F. eCollection 2024 Jul.
This case was designed for emergency medicine interns and residents.
Human trafficking is unfortunately an ever-growing and wide-reaching problem in the United States as well as the rest of the world. The International Labor Organization estimates 49.6 million people were affected by this modern-day slavery worldwide in 2021.1,2 The emergency department represents an opportunity to identify and provide aid to victims of human trafficking. Studies have shown that 63.3% of survivors interacted with the emergency department during their time of exploitation; however, most of these patients are not identified as human trafficking victims and opportunities for intervention are missed.3,4.
By the end of this simulation, participants will be able to: (1) Identify signs of human trafficking. (2) Demonstrate the ability to perform a primary and secondary assessment of a patient when there is concern for human trafficking. (3) Demonstrate the ability to appropriately separate an at-risk patient from a potential trafficker. (4) Identify resources and a reliable course of action to permanently remove the patient from the harmful situation.
A hybrid teaching model was employed that included both a lecture and a standardized patient simulation session followed by a structured debriefing session.
A simulation with a standardized participant was implemented at an urban academic emergency department with a three-year EM residency program. Participants were evaluated with a survey prior to and after the simulation, where they responded to questions regarding human trafficking patients on a scale of 1 to 5, where 5 represented the greatest level of agreement. Nineteen emergency medicine interns and residents participated in this project.
Prior to simulation training, and after the lecture, residents were surveyed on their confidence in identifying and treating patients who are affected by trafficking, their level of previous training in this topic, and whether they considered trafficking an important issue in emergency medicine. When asked if human trafficking is an important issue faced by the emergency department, 15 of the 19 of residents who completed the survey rated the importance a 5/5 on a Likert scale ranging from 1-not important to 5. Residents were also asked if they had received prior training in human trafficking on a scale of never (1) to often (5). Eight residents responded with either never or close to never. Two months after the simulation, the residents were again sent an optional survey. Ten residents responded. All who participated in the simulation now rated themselves a 4/5 on a scale from not confident to very confident. Of those who did not attend the simulation, the median value was a 3/5. Out of the residents who attended the simulation training, every resident rated the experience 5 out of 5 in terms of usefulness. One hundred percent of residents would recommend simulation training on human trafficking to other emergency medicine residents.
This was an effective educational initiative because this education model allowed the residents to feel more comfortable identifying individuals affected by human trafficking, and all the residents who responded to the survey stated that they would recommend the use of simulation to others for education on human trafficking.
High-fidelity simulation, human trafficking identification, human trafficking response.
本案例是为急诊医学实习生和住院医师设计的。
不幸的是,人口贩卖在美国以及世界其他地区是一个日益严重且影响广泛的问题。国际劳工组织估计,2021年全球有4960万人受这种现代奴隶制影响。急诊科是识别和救助人口贩卖受害者的一个契机。研究表明,63.3%的幸存者在受剥削期间与急诊科有过接触;然而,这些患者中的大多数未被识别为人口贩卖受害者,干预机会也因此错失。
在本次模拟结束时,参与者将能够:(1)识别出人口贩卖的迹象。(2)在怀疑存在人口贩卖情况时,展示对患者进行初级和二级评估的能力。(3)展示将处于危险中的患者与潜在 trafficker 适当分开的能力。(4)识别出能将患者永久脱离有害处境的资源和可靠行动方案。
采用了一种混合教学模式,包括一场讲座、一次标准化患者模拟课程,随后是一次结构化的汇报总结课程。
在一个设有三年制急诊医学住院医师培训项目的城市学术急诊科,对一名标准化参与者进行了模拟。在模拟前和模拟后,通过一项调查对参与者进行评估,他们就有关人口贩卖患者的问题在1至5的量表上做出回应,5表示最高程度的认同。19名急诊医学实习生和住院医师参与了该项目。
在模拟训练前以及讲座之后,对住院医师就他们识别和治疗受人口贩卖影响患者的信心、他们此前在该主题上的培训水平,以及他们是否认为人口贩卖是急诊医学中的一个重要问题进行了调查。当被问及人口贩卖是否是急诊科面临的一个重要问题时,完成调查的19名住院医师中有15人在从1(不重要)到5的李克特量表上给重要性打了5分。还询问住院医师他们此前在人口贩卖方面接受培训的程度,从从未(1)到经常(5)进行评分。8名住院医师的回答是从未或几乎从未。模拟两个月后,再次向住院医师发送了一份可选调查。10名住院医师回复了。所有参与模拟的人现在在从不自信到非常自信的量表上给自己打了4分。在未参加模拟的人中,中位数是3分。在参加模拟训练的住院医师中,每位住院医师对该体验在有用性方面的评分都是5分。100%的住院医师会向其他急诊医学住院医师推荐关于人口贩卖的模拟训练。
这是一项有效的教育举措,因为这种教育模式让住院医师在识别受人口贩卖影响的个体时感觉更自在,并且所有回复调查的住院医师都表示他们会向其他人推荐使用模拟来进行人口贩卖方面的教育。
高保真模拟、人口贩卖识别;人口贩卖应对。