Title: Simulation in nursing education: why bother
1Simulation in nursing education why bother?
Maggie Nicol Professor of Clinical Skills CETL
Director St Bartholomew School of Nursing
Midwifery
2Centre for Excellence in Teaching Learning
(CETL) Clinical Communication Skills
- 3.15 million over 5 years
- Healthcare students at City University Queen
Mary, University of London - Enlarge existing interprofessional Skills Centre
- now 11 multipurpose skills labs communication
skills suite - New simulators, filming and video analysis
equipment - 2 facilitators and a learning technologist
- Clinical skills bus
3- Mobile skills facility to take the Skills Lab to
the students and staff in the placements - Driver/Facilitator to support lecturers and
facilitate student self-directed learning
4- In nursing 50 of the 3 years (2300 hours) is
spent in clinical placements. Why do we need
simulation? - Learning in clinical placements is considered to
be superior but .
5Learning in placements
- Poor performance now teaching others!
- Repeated unsupervised performance mistakes
become permanent
- Unstructured learning in the clinical
placements learning by osmosis
- Self-directed practise reinforcing poor
techniques if unsupervised
- Demonstration of some skills in university
6- Practise makes perfect
- Practise makes permanent!
- Only well supervised practise with constructive
feedback makes perfect
7Learning with simulation feedback
- Expert performance teach others
- Repeated rehearsal to achieve mastery
- Supervised practice with feedback in the
placement
- Self-directed practise until proficient,
ideally with video analysis/feedback
- Demonstration and supervised practise
- Books, DVDs etc - Preparing to learn
8Hierarchy of skills learning
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Supervised clinical practice with feedback
Learning in simulation with feedback
Unsupervised clinical practice
Demonstrations DVDs
Manuals and books
9Benefits of simulation
- Patients clients are not exposed to complete
novices - Safe environment where mistakes become learning
opportunities - Complexity can be controlled according to the
learning outcomes - Confidence can be built before contact with real
patients
10Benefits of simulation
- Exposure to required skills can be guaranteed
- Sophisticated simulations make it feel realistic
but safe - Able to stop the action to make links with
theoretical knowledge and test learning - Allows students staff to develop and maintain
rarely used but essential skills (e.g. CPR)
11Benefits of simulation
- Students can repeat the skill as often as
necessary to develop confidence - Allows student to learn at their own pace
- Allows students to experience being on the
receiving end - Students can express their fears and ask
difficult questions - Students can make mistakes and appreciate their
consequences without harm to the patient
12The road to competence? Well, its plainand
simple to express
Err and err and err again
but less and less and less. Piet Hein, Danish
inventor and poet
13Disadvantages of simulation
- Skills Lab are costly whereas clinical placements
are free - High fidelity simulators cost thousands
- It is hard to measure the cost-effectiveness of
using simulation - Time consuming to prepare realistic simulations
- Hard to simulate the whole experience to set the
skills in context
14Clinical placements why bother?
- Learning in simulation and learning in clinical
placements Do we need both? - Yes
- But .
- Maybe some of the placement time should be
- spent learning in simulation?
15NMC Simulation Project
- 13 pilot sites across UK
- All branches and all years of nursing involved
- Up to 7 days (or equivalent) of practice hours to
be spent learning in simulation - Report due in September 2007
16Conclusion
- Simulation should be regarded as an essential
stage in the process of learning clinical
communication skills - Simulation can provide opportunities for
realistic inter-professional learning that are
difficult to arrange in real clinical practice - Learning in simulation will never replace
clinical placements but - Simulation can be far more effective than brief
voyeuristic visits to specialist areas (e.g.
maternity units) or simply being there in
clinical area
17Conclusion
- Use of simulation is ideal to prepare students to
enable them make best use of learning in
placements and achieve the NMC standards of
proficiency for safe and effective practice - Use of simulation is ideal to de-brief students
and help them to make sense of practice - As clinical placements come under increasing
pressure research is needed to determine - What can best be learnt using simulation?
- What can students only learn in real practice?
- How do we best prepare them to make sure that
they do?
18Maggie Nicol maggie.nicol.1_at_city.ac.uk