Evaluating a Multimodal Clinical Anesthesia Course Integrated Into an Existing Veterinary Curriculum
Autor: | Robert D. Keegan, Julie A. Noyes, Susan M. Matthew, David C. Rankin, Kira J. Carbonneau, Mauricio Loría Lépiz |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Veterinary medicine
020205 medical informatics Epidemiology education Medicine (miscellaneous) 02 engineering and technology 030230 surgery Education Task (project management) 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Anesthesiology ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Humans Anesthesia Curriculum Simulation Training Clinical performance Rubric Cognition Kirkpatrick model Modeling and Simulation Clinical Competence Psychology Veterinary anesthesia Professional skills |
Zdroj: | Simulation in healthcare : journal of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare. 16(3) |
ISSN: | 1559-713X |
Popis: | INTRODUCTION This study evaluated a multimodal, simulation-based course in veterinary anesthesia integrated into an existing veterinary curriculum. METHODS A simulation-based, multimodal training course in clinical anesthesia was evaluated using outcomes from multiple levels of the Kirkpatrick Model of Training Evaluation. Cognitive and affective outcomes were evaluated before and after instruction. Head-mounted cameras were used to record clinical performance during students' first live patient anesthesia experience in the curriculum. RESULTS Pretest-posttest analysis of cognitive and affective outcomes for course participants revealed significant increases in knowledge and self-efficacy. Course participants received higher ratings on clinical task performance and professional skills (ie, communication and collaboration) compared with a matched control group when evaluated by blinded, external raters using a standardized rubric. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that implementing a multimodal anesthesia simulation-based course directly into the curriculum can enhance cognitive and affective outcomes and prepare students for subsequent anesthesia-related patient care experiences. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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