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Tytuł pozycji:

The Mystery Dinner RCA: Using Gamification and Simulation to Teach Root Cause Analysis.

Tytuł:
The Mystery Dinner RCA: Using Gamification and Simulation to Teach Root Cause Analysis.
Autorzy:
Smeraglio A; Assistant Professor Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine; Hospitalist, Division of Hospital & Specialty Medicine, Portland VA Medical Center.
DiVeronica M; Assistant Professor Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine; Hospitalist, Division of Hospital & Specialty Medicine, Portland VA Medical Center.
Terndrup C; Assistant Professor Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine.
Luty J; Assistant Professor Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine.
Waagmeester G; Fellow Pulmonary & Critical Care, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine.
Hunsaker S; Associate Professor Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine; Hospitalist, Division of Hospital & Specialty Medicine, Portland VA Medical Center.
Źródło:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources [MedEdPORTAL] 2021 Jun 21; Vol. 17, pp. 11165. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jun 21.
Typ publikacji:
Journal Article
Język:
English
Imprint Name(s):
Original Publication: Washington, DC : Association of American Medical Colleges, [2005]-
MeSH Terms:
Root Cause Analysis*
Students, Medical*
Curriculum ; Humans ; Meals ; Patient Safety
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Contributed Indexing:
Keywords: Games; Gamification; Health Systems; Interdisciplinary Medicine; Interprofessional Education; Quality Improvement/Patient Safety; Root Cause Analysis; Simulation
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20210705 Date Completed: 20210709 Latest Revision: 20210714
Update Code:
20240105
PubMed Central ID:
PMC8215086
DOI:
10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11165
PMID:
34222649
Czasopismo naukowe
Introduction: Root cause analysis (RCA) is a widely utilized tool for investigating systems issues that lead to patient safety events and near misses, yet only 38% of learners participate in an interdisciplinary patient safety investigation during training. Common barriers to RCA education and participation include faculty time and materials, trainee time constraints, and learner engagement.
Methods: We developed a simulated RCA workshop to be taught to a mix of medical and surgical specialties from over 11 GME programs and to third-year medical students. The workshop was a single 90-minute session formatted as a gamified mystery dinner including characters and sequentially revealed clues to promote engagement. Participant satisfaction and subjective knowledge, skills, and attitudes were assessed with a pre/post survey.
Results: The workshop was completed by 134 learners between October 2018 and October 2019. The short workshop duration and premade simulation allowed a small number of faculty to train a wide variety of learners in various educational settings. Participants' presurvey (124 out of 134, 92%) versus postsurvey (113 out of 134, 84%) responses showed that attitudes about RCA were statistically improved across all domains queried, with an average effect size of 0.6 (moderate effect); 91% of participants would recommend this course to a colleague.
Discussion: A 90-minute, gamified, simulated RCA workshop was taught to medical students and multiple GME specialties with subjective improvements in patient safety attitudes and knowledge while alleviating faculty time constraints in case development.
(© 2021 Smeraglio et al.)

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