gadgets and simulation by jon gatward
DESCRIPTION
The Sim revolution. Jon Gatward on the future of simulation in critical care. Strategies for pulling it off, no matter your resources. See smacc.net.au and intensivecarenetwork.com for more.TRANSCRIPT
Tech wizardry..
..or Gizmo idolatry?
Gadgets and Sim
The lesson
• What’s out there
• Why gadgets and sim might work
• Whether they do work
• What we can do with them
• What we should do with them
www.edus2.com
Why gadgets and sim
might work..
How we learn…
http://www.decaluwe.nl/articles/WhyDoSimulationGamesWork-InSearchOfTheActive.pdf
RETENTION
Learning theory
Evidence
3Di Teams
• VR• Task Trainer• HPS
609 studiesOnly 32 studies with patient-related outcomes
HIE rate
$90 million since 2008
“’High-tech’ simulators...do not always add value to training...
less expensive technologies can be used in certain instances
without sacrificing educational effectiveness”
“Simulation is a technique not a technology”
Oh, just not smart. Even for you.
How can we use
gadgets and sim?
Team Training
Marino Festa, Children’s Hospital at Westmead
• Airway manoeuvres and adjuncts
• Nasal prongs 15L/min
• Bag Valve Mask 15L/min +/-ventilate
• 2 person technique
• Position patient for intubation
• Check-in with Airway Assistant and Drug Administrator
Laryngoscope size 4 Tube tieETT: 7F 8M, cuff, lube 10ml syringeBougie LMA size 4/5Stethoscope Cric Kit
Airway Doctor
Road testing
Difficult conversations
Designated requestor simulation training
Demonstrating good
practice
2 more reasons..
It’s fun
It’s the right thing to do
HealthCare Risk July/Aug 2009
Tamara, Garry and Christopher Hills
“Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter.
Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”Samuel Beckett