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Titulo Artículo:
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Autores :
Rebecca Jaffe;
Dimitrios Papanagnou;
Xiao Chi Zhang;
Jillian Zavodnick;
Gretchen Diemer;
Autor corporativo:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
Editores:
Medline-PubMed ;
Idioma:
Inglés
Páginas:
1
ISBN:
2374-8265
Existencias:
7
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
Titulo Artículo:
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Autores :
Rebecca Jaffe;
Dimitrios Papanagnou;
Xiao Chi Zhang;
Jillian Zavodnick;
Gretchen Diemer;
Autor corporativo:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
Editores:
Medline-PubMed ;
Idioma:
Inglés
Páginas:
1
Existencias:
7
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
Titulo Artículo:
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Autores:
Rebecca Jaffe
,
Dimitrios Papanagnou
,
Xiao Chi Zhang
,
Jillian Zavodnick
,
Gretchen Diemer
,
.
Titulo Revista:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
.
Numero:
Volumen:
0
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Base de Datos Bibliográfica:
Medline-PubMed ,
.
Suplemento:
Idioma:
Inglés
Página Inicial:
1
Página Final:
7
ISBN:
2374-8265
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
Título Medline-PubMed :
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Autores :
Rebecca Jaffe;
Dimitrios Papanagnou;
Xiao Chi Zhang;
Jillian Zavodnick;
Gretchen Diemer;
Autor corporativo:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Tipo :
Medline-PubMed .
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
Título Medline-PubMed :
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Autores :
Rebecca Jaffe;
Dimitrios Papanagnou;
Xiao Chi Zhang;
Jillian Zavodnick;
Gretchen Diemer;
Autor corporativo:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Paginas:
1.
ISBN:
2374-8265 .
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
Titulo Artículo:
Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting
Resumen:
Introduction: Although residents are on the front lines of patient care, they enter few formal patient safety reports on the adverse events and near misses they witness. Demonstrating the rationale and mechanics of reporting may improve this. Methods: We designed and implemented an escape room patient safety simulation to incorporate active learning, gamification, and adult learning theory into intern patient safety onboarding. Interns from all sponsoring institution programs participated, identifying, mitigating, and reporting a range of patient safety hazards. Props and faculty time were the major resources required. Results: One hundred twenty interns participated in this simulation in June 2018. Forty-one percent reported previous training on reporting errors, and only 5% had previously entered an event report. Average confidence in ability to identify patient safety hazards improved after the simulation from 6.35 to 8.00 on a 10-point rating scale. The simulation was rated as relevant or highly relevant to practice by 96% of interns. Discussion: Several factors contribute to a low error-reporting rate among house staff. We developed a simulation modeled on popular escape room activities to increase awareness of safety hazards and ensure familiarity with the actual online reporting system our interns will use in the clinical environment.
Fecha de publicación:
2019.
Autor corporativo:
MedEdPORTAL : the journal of teaching and learning resources,
.
Idioma:
Inglés
Palabras claves:
Patient Safety
Simulation
Gamification
Risk Management
Error Reporting
Event Reporting
Público objetivo:
Posgrado
Docentes
Investigadores
Educadores Medicos
Otros profesionales de la salud
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Hola, encontré este documento en la biblioteca especializada en Educación Médica de ASCOFAME :Rebecca Jaffe; Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting(2019). Podras consultarlo en el Siguiente link: https://ascofame.org.co/biblioteca/detalle_documento.php?id=1929
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Rebecca Jaffe Dimitrios Papanagnou Xiao Chi Zhang Jillian Zavodnick Gretchen Diemer Rebecca Jaffe Dimitrios Papanagnou Xiao Chi Zhang Jillian Zavodnick Gretchen Diemer Patient Safety Escape Room: A Graduate Medical Education Simulation for Event Reporting. 2019; 0Ed. 1.