Title: Feedback is a key feature of effective medical simulation
1RePedSim Repetitive Pediatric Simulation
Training Marc Auerbach MD, David Kessler MD, and
Jessica Foltin MD Bellevue Hospital Center and
NYU School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics,
Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine
METHODS
BACKGROUND
CONCLUSIONS
- Design
- Prospective pilot study of an novel debriefing
method - Setting In-situ simulation room on pediatric
in-patient ward - Learners New York University/Bellevue
Hospital Pediatric Residents 2008-2009 - Group size four learners, two faculty
(fellow/attending) - Statistics Mann-Whitney U test compared
Likert scale responses - Data Collection
- Anonymous, self-reported survey
- Five-point Likert Scale completed after each
simulation session by learners - 1strongly disagree, 2slightly disagree,
3neutral, 4slightly agree, 5strongly agree - Groups
- Non-RePedSim conventional debriefing after
simulation session (03/08 to 09/08) - RePedSim conventional debriefing followed by
repetition of scenario (10/08-12/08)
- Feedback is a key feature of effective medical
simulation - Little evidence on what is the best method for
debriefing - Opportunities to apply the knowledge and skills
discussed during debriefing could improve
retention
- Repetition with a chance to correct errors
results in improved self-reported effectiveness
of simulation sessions - The opportunity to immediately respond to
feedback may improve retention of rarely used
skills
OBJECTIVES
- To compare knowledge, skills, and confidence of
learners and subjective quality between groups - Standard debriefing format
- RePedSim debriefing format
LIMITATIONS
- Single clinical site, small sample size
- Self-reported data at a single time point
- No test for retention
RePedSim Format
RESULTS
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
- Trainees requested an opportunity to repeat
simulations after debriefing to apply their
skills - Training sessions restructured in response to
feedback - Example of RePedSim format
- Anaphylaxis case- fair performance
- Debrief- discuss early administration of
epinephrine - Repetition anaphylaxis case- improved performance
- Debrief- reinforcement
- Prior Experience
- Mean Self Reported Five-point Likert Scores
- Correlate RePedSim training with improved
retention - Explore effect on clinical performance
- Develop an optimal debriefing model
RePedSim N 106 StandardSim N 23
Simulation Experiences (mean) 3.1 /- 0.2 2.8 /- 0.5
Real Code Experiences (mean) 1.5 /- 0.2 1.2 /- 0.4
Post Graduate Year (mean) 1.5 1.5
THANK YOU TO OUR RESIDENTS
Research supported by rbabyfoundation.org and
KiDS of NYU
Standard Format
RePedSIm StandardSim P-value
Improved my knowledge 4.6/-0.5 4.2/-0.7 0.022
Improved my skills 4.5/-0.6 3.9/-0.7 0.002
Improved my confidence 4.3/-0.6 4.1/-0.8 0.25
Was effective for teaching 4.9/-0.3 4.1/-0.8 lt0.0005
Was effective for evaluation 4.6/-0.6 4.2/-0.8 0.045
Debriefing was of high quality 4.8/-0.4 4.4/-0 0.044
- The learner engages in practice followed by
feedback - Session ends after debriefing
P-value for Mann-Whitney U Mean Ranks