Simulation-based research in emergency medicine in Canada: Priorities and perspectives

Author:

Chaplin TimothyORCID,Thoma Brent,Petrosoniak Andrew,Caners Kyla,McColl Tamara,Forristal Chantal,Dakin Christa,Deshaies Jean-Francois,Raymond-Dufresne Eliane,Fotheringham Mary,Ha David,Holm Nicole,Huffman James,Lonergan Ann-Marie,Mastoras GeorgeORCID,O'Brien Michael,Paradis Marie-Rose,Sowers Nicholas,Stern Errol,Hall Andrew K.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectiveSimulation plays an integral role in the Canadian healthcare system with applications in quality improvement, systems development, and medical education. High-quality, simulation-based research will ensure its effective use. This study sought to summarize simulation-based research activity and its facilitators and barriers, as well as establish priorities for simulation-based research in Canadian emergency medicine (EM).MethodsSimulation-leads from Canadian departments or divisions of EM associated with a general FRCP-EM training program surveyed and documented active EM simulation-based research at their institutions and identified the perceived facilitators and barriers. Priorities for simulation-based research were generated by simulation-leads via a second survey; these were grouped into themes and finally endorsed by consensus during an in-person meeting of simulation leads. Priority themes were also reviewed by senior simulation educators.ResultsTwenty simulation-leads representing all 14 invited institutions participated in the study between February and May, 2018. Sixty-two active, simulation-based research projects were identified (median per institution = 4.5, IQR 4), as well as six common facilitators and five barriers. Forty-nine priorities for simulation-based research were reported and summarized into eight themes: simulation in competency-based medical education, simulation for inter-professional learning, simulation for summative assessment, simulation for continuing professional development, national curricular development, best practices in simulation-based education, simulation-based education outcomes, and simulation as an investigative methodology.ConclusionThis study summarized simulation-based research activity in EM in Canada, identified its perceived facilitators and barriers, and built national consensus on priority research themes. This represents the first step in the development of a simulation-based research agenda specific to Canadian EM.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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