Elnaggar Alqasim, Abdelnour David, Chauhdri Ammar, Miller Candice, Rafique Rumyah, Mao Jack, Frei Ashley, Naessig Sara, Johnson Julian D, Sternberg Marley, Millar Audrey, Court Tannor, Nham Fong, Daher Ahmed, Gupta Andrew, Gatz Joshua, Dimovski Radomir, Alexander James, Geamanu Andreea, Vaidya Rahul
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Wayne State University Detroit Medical Center, Detroit, USA.
Cureus. 2025 Jun 17;17(6):e86208. doi: 10.7759/cureus.86208. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Access to sideline medical care is limited in many public-school athletic programs, especially in underserved urban areas. The Detroit Public School Health Corps (DPSHC) was founded in response to the tragic death of a Detroit public school basketball player who suffered a cardiac arrest during a game, underscoring the critical need for timely and effective sideline emergency care. DPSHC is a student-led inreach initiative targeting local healthcare gaps by providing equity-driven medical training in nearby schools. This study tests the hypothesis that simulation-based training will be more effective than traditional didactic training in improving a student volunteer's clinical preparedness, knowledge retention, and confidence in sideline medical roles. The primary objectives are to compare confidence and knowledge gains between the two training methods, while a secondary objective evaluates the perceived impact of resident physician involvement during simulation.
Forty-seven medical student volunteers completed either lecture-based (n=16) or simulation-based (n=31) training. Both groups completed identical pre- and post-training surveys assessing confidence in managing sports injuries and clinical knowledge. Paired t-tests analyzed the data to evaluate within-group improvements from before to after a training session, while independent t-tests compared the degree of improvement between training formats.
Both groups showed a significant improvement in confidence (p < 0.001). The simulation group showed greater confidence gains than the lecture group (33.06% vs. 24.53%, p = 0.02). Knowledge scores improved more in the simulation group (62.1% vs. 31.25%), though not significantly (p = 0.153). Resident physician involvement was rated invaluable by 25 (80.6%) of the simulation participants.
Simulation-based training enhanced medical student volunteers' confidence more than lecture-based methods in sideline care roles within an inreach program addressing healthcare disparities. These findings support the expansion of simulation-based learning as a core component of equity-driven, community-embedded medical education.
在许多公立学校的体育项目中,获得场外医疗护理的机会有限,尤其是在服务不足的城市地区。底特律公立学校健康团(DPSHC)的成立是为了应对底特律一名公立学校篮球运动员在比赛中心脏骤停不幸死亡的事件,这凸显了及时有效的场外紧急护理的迫切需求。DPSHC是一项由学生主导的校内倡议,通过在附近学校提供公平驱动的医学培训来填补当地医疗保健差距。本研究检验了这样一个假设:在提高学生志愿者的临床准备、知识保留以及对场外医疗角色的信心方面,基于模拟的培训将比传统的讲授式培训更有效。主要目标是比较两种培训方法之间的信心和知识提升情况,而次要目标是评估住院医师参与模拟培训期间的感知影响。
47名医学生志愿者完成了基于讲座的培训(n = 16)或基于模拟的培训(n = 31)。两组都完成了相同的培训前和培训后调查,评估管理运动损伤的信心和临床知识。配对t检验分析数据,以评估培训课程前后组内的改善情况,而独立t检验比较不同培训形式之间的改善程度。
两组的信心都有显著提高(p < 0.001)。模拟组的信心提升幅度大于讲座组(33.06%对24.53%,p = 0.02)。模拟组的知识得分提高更多(62.1%对31.25%),但差异不显著(p = 0.153)。25名(80.6%)模拟参与者认为住院医师的参与非常有价值。
在一个解决医疗保健差距的校内项目中,基于模拟的培训比基于讲座的方法更能增强医学生志愿者在场外护理角色方面的信心。这些发现支持将基于模拟的学习扩展为公平驱动、社区嵌入式医学教育的核心组成部分。