Author: Diaz, Maria Carmen G.; Walsh, Barbara M.
Title: Telesimulationâ€based education during COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: fc8cxvba Document date: 2020_10_12
ID: fc8cxvba
Snippet: Simulation is a valuable, immersive educational tool for both health professional trainees and experienced clinicians. By promoting a realistic, collaborative, safe, handsâ€on, learning environment, simulation allows interprofessional teams to come together and practise both routine and high stakes, lowâ€frequency events. The COVIDâ€19 pandemic and the need for social distancing have shifted traditional simulationâ€based medical education towards a virtual platform: telesimulation. Telesimul
Document: Simulation is a valuable, immersive educational tool for both health professional trainees and experienced clinicians. By promoting a realistic, collaborative, safe, handsâ€on, learning environment, simulation allows interprofessional teams to come together and practise both routine and high stakes, lowâ€frequency events. The COVIDâ€19 pandemic and the need for social distancing have shifted traditional simulationâ€based medical education towards a virtual platform: telesimulation. Telesimulation is an evolving field and the speed at which clinical educators need to adapt to use this platform is unprecedented. Educators must quickly navigate and leverage the differences between traditional simulation and telesimulation to create robust remote educational experiences. Telesimulation has unique goals and objectives, technology needs, and participant roles that need to be understood and properly operationalized to maximize opportunities for learning. This article reviews the authors’ recommendations for developing and delivering successful telesimulations.
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