Telesimulation for COVID-19 Ventilator Management Training With Social-Distancing Restrictions During the Coronavirus Pandemic
Author(s) -
Neel Naik,
Robert Finkelstein,
Joy Howell,
Kapil Rajwani,
Kevin Ching
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
simulation and gaming
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.51
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1552-826X
pISSN - 1046-8781
DOI - 10.1177/1046878120926561
Subject(s) - pandemic , covid-19 , health care , social distance , personal protective equipment , flexibility (engineering) , medicine , medical education , intervention (counseling) , nursing , psychology , medical emergency , political science , statistics , mathematics , disease , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law
Background. In early 2020, the novel coronavirus pandemic forced communities around the globe to shut down and isolate. Routine graduate medical education activities have also been suspended as resident and fellow physicians-in-training have been re-deployed to support critical patient care services. Innovation. We developed a two-part hybrid telesimulation model to teach COVID-19 ventilator management strategies while physically separating a group of learners and an instructor from one another. Learners consisted of non-ICU health care providers with limited experience in ventilator management being redeployed to manage ICU level COVID-19 infected patients. In the first week, the video tutorial has been viewed over 500 times and we have facilitated 14 telesimulation sessions, including 48 participants comprised of hospitalists, emergency medicine physicians and physician assistants, pediatric residents, nurses, and a nurse educator. Conclusion. We believe that the combination of a video tutorial followed by an interactive telesimulation was successful in providing timely education during a coronavirus pandemic. Furthermore, it reinforced the value and flexibility in which simulation education could continue conveniently for learners despite significant restrictions in place during the coronavirus pandemic. Research is needed to assess the efficacy of this hybrid intervention in preparing healthcare workers and to determine if the knowledge is successfully transferred to the clinical setting.
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