Author:
Charnetski Matthew D.,Wawersik Dawn,Palaganas Janice C.,Duff Jonathan P.,Bailey Shannon K. T.,Ramachandra Geethanjali,Birido Nuha,Elkin Rachel,Nair Bindhu,Thurber Peter,Gross Isabel T.
Abstract
Abstract
The use of distance simulation has rapidly expanded in recent years with the physical distance requirements of the COVID-19 pandemic. With this development, there has been a concurrent increase in research activities and publications on distance simulation. The authors conducted a systematic review of the peer-reviewed distance health care simulation literature. Data extraction and a risk-of-bias assessment were performed on selected articles. Review of the databases and gray literature reference lists identified 10,588 titles for review. Of those, 570 full-text articles were assessed, with 54 articles included in the final analysis. Most of these were published during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020–2022). None of the included studies examined an outcome higher than a Kirkpatrick level of 2. Most studies only examined low-level outcomes such as satisfaction with the simulation session. There was, however, a distinction in studies that were conducted in a learning environment where all participants were in different locations (“distance only”) as compared with where some of the participants shared the same location (“mixed distance”). This review exclusively considered studies that focused solely on distance. More comparative studies exploring higher level outcomes are required to move the field forward.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
2 articles.
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