open access
In situ simulation of cardiac arrest
- Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center, Department of Surgery, Richmond, United States
- Polish Society of Medical Simulation, Poland
- Medical Simulation Center, Lublin Medical University, Lublin, Poland
- Department of Medical Rescue, Chapter of Emergency Medicine, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Dabrowskiego st 79, 60-529 Poznan, Poland
open access
Abstract
In-hospital cardiac arrest is one of the most complicated events healthcare providers will manage in a hospital setting. Cardiac arrest also is a rare event compared to other clinical events managed on a routine basis, requiring deliberate preparation of staff to be able to have the knowledge, technical skills and teamwork necessary to manage such an event when it occurs.
Simulation-based education has been demonstrated to be an effective method of educating healthcare providers. More recently, hospital systems have begun using in situ simulation for the training of healthcare providers and identifying latent safety threats.
In situ simulation is defined as: “Taking place in the actual patient care setting/environment in an effort to achieve a high level of fidelity and realism; this training is particularly suitable for difficult work environments, due to space constraints or noise”.
Abstract
In-hospital cardiac arrest is one of the most complicated events healthcare providers will manage in a hospital setting. Cardiac arrest also is a rare event compared to other clinical events managed on a routine basis, requiring deliberate preparation of staff to be able to have the knowledge, technical skills and teamwork necessary to manage such an event when it occurs.
Simulation-based education has been demonstrated to be an effective method of educating healthcare providers. More recently, hospital systems have begun using in situ simulation for the training of healthcare providers and identifying latent safety threats.
In situ simulation is defined as: “Taking place in the actual patient care setting/environment in an effort to achieve a high level of fidelity and realism; this training is particularly suitable for difficult work environments, due to space constraints or noise”.
Keywords
in-hospital cardiac arrest, resuscitation, education, in situ, medical simulation
Title
In situ simulation of cardiac arrest
Journal
Disaster and Emergency Medicine Journal
Issue
Pages
116-119
Published online
2017-10-20
Page views
1250
Article views/downloads
1291
DOI
Bibliographic record
Disaster Emerg Med J 2017;2(3):116-119.
Keywords
in-hospital cardiac arrest
resuscitation
education
in situ
medical simulation
Authors
Michael Czekajlo
Agata Dabrowska
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