Affiliation:
1. South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust
Abstract
Introduction: Education and training delivered within ambulance services is vital to clinicians maintaining competence, confidence and currency. Simulation and debrief in medical education aims to imitate clinical experience and provide real-time feedback. The South Western Ambulance
Service NHS Foundation Trust employs senior doctors in their learning and development (L&D) team to support the development of ‘train the trainer’ courses for L&D officers (LDOs). This short report of a quality improvement initiative describes the implementation and evaluation
of a simulation-debrief model of paramedic education.Methods: A quality improvement design was adopted. The train the trainer scenarios for simulation-debrief were designed and written following the trust’s training needs analysis by the L&D team. The course ran for two
days, and each scenario was facilitated by faculty experienced in simulation (both doctors and paramedics). Low-fidelity mannequins and standard ambulance training kit was used (including response bags, training monitor and defibrillator). Participants’ pre- and post-scenario self-reported
confidence scores were recorded, and qualitative feedback requested. Numerical data were analysed, and collated into graphs using Excel. Thematic analysis of comments was used to present qualitative themes. The SQUIRE 2.0 checklist for reporting quality improvement initiatives was used to
frame this short report.Results: Forty-eight LDOs attended across three courses. All participants reported improved confidence scores in the clinical topic covered after each simulation-debrief scenario, with a minority reporting equivocal scores. Formal qualitative feedback from
participants indicated an overwhelmingly positive response to the introduction of simulation-debrief as an education method, and a move away from summative, assessment-based training. The positive value of a multidisciplinary faculty was also reported.Conclusion: The simulation-debrief
model of paramedic education represents a move away from the use of didactic teaching and ‘tick box’-style assessments in previous train the trainer courses. The introduction of simulation-debrief teaching methodology has had a positive impact on paramedics’ confidence in
the selected clinical topics, and is seen by LDOs as an effective and valuable education method.
Reference18 articles.
1. Debriefing in simulated-based learning: Facilitating a reflective discussion;Arafeh;Journal of Perinatal & Neonatal Nursing,2010
2. Development of simulation education debriefing protocol with faculty guide for enhancement clinical reasoning;Bae;BMC Medical Education,2019
3. Scenario based outdoor simulation in pre-hospital trauma care using a simple mannequin model;Bredmose;Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine,2010
4. Paramedics teach future doctors. UK medical school leads in training of prehospital care for future medics;Cassidy;JEMS: A Journal of Emergency Medical Services,2013
5. Thematic analysis of qualitative data: AMEE guide no. 131;Kiger;Medical Teacher,2020
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献