1. Multidisciplinary in-situ simulation to evaluate a rare but high-risk process at a level 1 trauma centre: the 'Mega-Sim' approach
- Author
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Andrew Sawka, Nori L. Bradley, Kelsey Innes, Christa Dakin, Nasira Lakha, and S. Morad Hameed
- Subjects
Adult ,Medical knowledge ,Discussions in Surgery ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,media_common.quotation_subject ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Trauma Centers ,Pregnancy ,Multidisciplinary approach ,In situ simulation ,Risk process ,medicine ,Humans ,Trauma centre ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Simulation Training ,media_common ,Patient Care Team ,Teamwork ,Event (computing) ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Personnel, Hospital ,Pregnancy Complications ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Wounds and Injuries ,Female ,Surgery ,Medical emergency ,Emergencies ,business - Abstract
Summary Multidisciplinary simulation has been used to successfully teach crisis resource management in operating room and emergency department settings. This article describes a “Mega-Sim” approach using an in-situ simulation that moves among multiple hospital departments to enhance multidisciplinary training and assess institutional response to a rare but high-risk event: trauma in a pregnant patient. It appears that a Mega-Sim can be used to identify systems issues, increase medical knowledge and improve perceptions of teamwork and communication within and among hospital departments.
- Published
- 2018