Persad Kalyaani, Khatoon Aqeelah, Buchipudi Aashritha, Jie Yee Amanda Ling, Philip Nevil C, Sharma Angelica, Sinha Akshat, Salahuddin Sofia, Kempegowda Punith
Birmingham Medical School, School of Medical Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Department of Diabetes and Endocrinology, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK.
Diabet Med. 2025 Sep;42(9):e70068. doi: 10.1111/dme.70068. Epub 2025 Jun 17.
The joint consensus of the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes highlights the need for practical, up-to-date training in acute diabetes care. Therefore, this session aimed to develop an applied learning intervention that identifies key gaps in acute diabetes training, assesses participants' change in confidence in managing these scenarios following the intervention and evaluates participants' satisfaction and the intervention's relevance to practice.
To design the programme, we adopted Kern's six-step curriculum development framework. Clinical experts were interviewed to assess general needs, and students and resident doctors were interviewed to assess targeted needs. The SIMBA (Simulation via Instant Messaging for Bedside Application) model was adopted to develop cases alongside generative AI and expert input. Pre- and post-session surveys assessed participants' confidence, while the latter also assessed satisfaction and relevance to practice.
33 participants attended the session. 17 participants completed both pre- and post-session surveys and were included in the study. Simulation performance scores averaged 4.0/5 for history taking, interpretation and clinical judgement; 3.9/5 for physical examination and investigations; and 3.6/5 for management. Confidence in managing acute diabetes scenarios improved significantly (pre vs. post: 33.3% vs. 78.4%, p < 0.001). 94.1% strongly agreed the cases were relevant, and 82.3% preferred this teaching method over traditional approaches.
The model identified the need for targeted education on physical examination, investigations and management specific to acute diabetes scenarios. Simulation-based education significantly enhances confidence and is perceived as highly relevant for training in acute diabetes management.
美国糖尿病协会和欧洲糖尿病研究协会的联合共识强调了在急性糖尿病护理方面进行实用、最新培训的必要性。因此,本次会议旨在开发一种应用学习干预措施,以识别急性糖尿病培训中的关键差距,评估干预后参与者在处理这些情况时信心的变化,并评估参与者的满意度以及该干预措施与实践的相关性。
为了设计该项目,我们采用了克恩的六步课程开发框架。采访临床专家以评估总体需求,采访学生和住院医生以评估目标需求。采用SIMBA(通过即时通讯进行床边应用模拟)模型,并结合生成式人工智能和专家意见来开发案例。会前和会后调查评估参与者的信心,会后调查还评估满意度和与实践的相关性。
33名参与者参加了本次会议。17名参与者完成了会前和会后调查,并被纳入研究。模拟表现得分在病史采集、解读和临床判断方面平均为4.0/5;体格检查和检查方面为3.9/5;管理方面为3.6/5。处理急性糖尿病情况的信心显著提高(会前与会后:33.3%对78.4%,p<0.001)。94.1%的人强烈同意这些案例具有相关性,82.3%的人更喜欢这种教学方法而非传统方法。
该模型确定了针对急性糖尿病情况的体格检查、检查和管理方面进行有针对性教育的必要性。基于模拟的教育显著增强了信心,并且被认为与急性糖尿病管理培训高度相关。