Publication | Open Access
Simulation-based learning: Just like the real thing
875
Citations
13
References
2010
Year
Artificial IntelligenceTraining SystemEngineeringSimulationSimulation MethodologyTeamwork TrainingVirtual RealitySimulation-based Medical EducationSurgery SimulatorModeling And SimulationSimulation LanguageModel-based LearningCognitive ScienceAutonomous LearningLearning SciencesSurgical TrainingLearning AnalyticsSimulation-based LearningNursingPatient SafetyHealth Profession TrainingMedicineHealth InformaticsEmergency Medicine
Simulation is a versatile, immersive practice technique used across disciplines, especially in medicine, to develop professionals’ knowledge, skills, and attitudes while protecting patients and addressing ethical and teamwork challenges. By providing realistic scenarios and equipment, simulation enables repeated practice until mastery of procedures or skills is achieved. Teamwork training in simulated environments adds to traditional instruction, improves performance, and may reduce errors.
Simulation is a technique for practice and learning that can be applied to many different disciplines and trainees. It is a technique (not a technology) to replace and amplify real experiences with guided ones, often "immersive" in nature, that evoke or replicate substantial aspects of the real world in a fully interactive fashion. Simulation-based learning can be the way to develop health professionals' knowledge, skills, and attitudes, whilst protecting patients from unnecessary risks. Simulation-based medical education can be a platform which provides a valuable tool in learning to mitigate ethical tensions and resolve practical dilemmas. Simulation-based training techniques, tools, and strategies can be applied in designing structured learning experiences, as well as be used as a measurement tool linked to targeted teamwork competencies and learning objectives. It has been widely applied in fields such aviation and the military. In medicine, simulation offers good scope for training of interdisciplinary medical teams. The realistic scenarios and equipment allows for retraining and practice till one can master the procedure or skill. An increasing number of health care institutions and medical schools are now turning to simulation-based learning. Teamwork training conducted in the simulated environment may offer an additive benefit to the traditional didactic instruction, enhance performance, and possibly also help reduce errors.
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