1. Utilizing Telesimulation for Advanced Skills Training in Consultation and Handoff Communication: A Post‐COVID‐19 GME Bootcamp Experience
- Author
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Megham Twiss, Shannon K. Martin, Keme Carter, Vineet M. Arora, Latassa Love, Anita L. Blanchard, and Jeremy Podczerwinski
- Subjects
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Leadership and Management ,Handoff communication ,education ,MEDLINE ,Assessment and Diagnosis ,Simulation training ,Skills training ,Humans ,Medicine ,Referral and Consultation ,Care Planning ,Medical education ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Communication ,Health Policy ,Patient Handoff ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Hospital medicine ,Preparedness ,Fundamentals and skills ,Clinical Competence ,Communication skills ,business - Abstract
COVID-19 forced the switch to virtual for many educational strategies, including simulation. Virtual formats have the potential to broaden access to simulation training, especially in resource-heavy "bootcamp"-type settings. We converted our in-person communication skills bootcamp to telesimulation and compared effectiveness and satisfaction between formats. During June 2020 orientation, 130 entering interns at one institution participated, using Zoom® to perform one mock consultation and three mock handoffs. Faculty rated performance with checklists and gave feedback. Post-bootcamp surveys assessed participant satisfaction and practice preparedness. Telesimulation performance was comparable to in-person for consultations and slightly inferior for handoffs. Survey response rate was 100%. Compared to in-person, there was higher satisfaction with telesimulation, and interns felt more prepared for practice (95% vs 78%, P < .01); 99% recommended the experience. Fifty percent fewer faculty were required for implementation. Telesimulation was well-received and comparable to in-person bootcamp, representing a feasible, scalable training strategy for communication skills essential in hospital medicine.
- Published
- 2021