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Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study

BACKGROUND: Prenatal counseling at the limits of newborn viability involves sensitive interactions between neonatal providers and families. Empathetic discussions are currently learned through practice in times of high stress. Decision aids may help improve provider communication but have not been u...

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Autores principales: Motz, Patrick, Gray, Megan, Sawyer, Taylor, Kett, Jennifer, Danforth, Douglas, Maicher, Kellen, Umoren, Rachel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5970284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29752249
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/games.9611
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author Motz, Patrick
Gray, Megan
Sawyer, Taylor
Kett, Jennifer
Danforth, Douglas
Maicher, Kellen
Umoren, Rachel
author_facet Motz, Patrick
Gray, Megan
Sawyer, Taylor
Kett, Jennifer
Danforth, Douglas
Maicher, Kellen
Umoren, Rachel
author_sort Motz, Patrick
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prenatal counseling at the limits of newborn viability involves sensitive interactions between neonatal providers and families. Empathetic discussions are currently learned through practice in times of high stress. Decision aids may help improve provider communication but have not been universally adopted. Virtual standardized patients are increasingly recognized as a modality for education, but prenatal counseling simulations have not been described. To be valuable as a tool, a virtual patient would need to accurately portray emotions and elicit a realistic response from the provider. OBJECTIVE: To determine if neonatal providers can accurately identify a standardized virtual prenatal patient’s emotional states and examine the frequency of empathic responses to statements made by the patient. METHODS: A panel of Neonatologists, Simulation Specialists, and Ethicists developed a dialogue and identified empathic responses. Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA), a screen-based simulation of a woman at 23 weeks gestation, was capable of displaying anger, fear, sadness, and happiness through animations. Twenty-four neonatal providers, including a subgroup with an ethics interest, were asked to identify VANESSA’s emotions 28 times, respond to statements, and answer open-ended questions. The emotions were displayed in different formats: without dialogue, with text dialogue, and with audio dialogue. Participants completed a post-encounter survey describing demographics and experience. Data were reported using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data from open ended questions (eg, “What would you do?”) were examined using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Half of our participants had over 10 years of clinical experience. Most participants reported using medical research (18/23, 78%) and mortality calculators (17/23, 74%). Only the ethics-interested subgroup (10/23, 43%) listed counseling literature (7/10, 70%). Of 672 attempts, participants accurately identified VANESSA’s emotions 77.8% (523/672) of the time, and most (14/23, 61%) reported that they were confident in identifying these emotions. The ethics interest group was more likely to choose empathic responses (P=.002). Participants rated VANESSA as easy to use (22/23, 96%) and reported that she had realistic dialogue (15/23, 65%). CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study shows that a prenatal counseling simulation is feasible and can yield useful data on prenatal counseling communication. Our participants showed a high rate of emotion recognition and empathy in their responses.
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spelling pubmed-59702842018-06-01 Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study Motz, Patrick Gray, Megan Sawyer, Taylor Kett, Jennifer Danforth, Douglas Maicher, Kellen Umoren, Rachel JMIR Serious Games Original Paper BACKGROUND: Prenatal counseling at the limits of newborn viability involves sensitive interactions between neonatal providers and families. Empathetic discussions are currently learned through practice in times of high stress. Decision aids may help improve provider communication but have not been universally adopted. Virtual standardized patients are increasingly recognized as a modality for education, but prenatal counseling simulations have not been described. To be valuable as a tool, a virtual patient would need to accurately portray emotions and elicit a realistic response from the provider. OBJECTIVE: To determine if neonatal providers can accurately identify a standardized virtual prenatal patient’s emotional states and examine the frequency of empathic responses to statements made by the patient. METHODS: A panel of Neonatologists, Simulation Specialists, and Ethicists developed a dialogue and identified empathic responses. Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA), a screen-based simulation of a woman at 23 weeks gestation, was capable of displaying anger, fear, sadness, and happiness through animations. Twenty-four neonatal providers, including a subgroup with an ethics interest, were asked to identify VANESSA’s emotions 28 times, respond to statements, and answer open-ended questions. The emotions were displayed in different formats: without dialogue, with text dialogue, and with audio dialogue. Participants completed a post-encounter survey describing demographics and experience. Data were reported using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data from open ended questions (eg, “What would you do?”) were examined using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Half of our participants had over 10 years of clinical experience. Most participants reported using medical research (18/23, 78%) and mortality calculators (17/23, 74%). Only the ethics-interested subgroup (10/23, 43%) listed counseling literature (7/10, 70%). Of 672 attempts, participants accurately identified VANESSA’s emotions 77.8% (523/672) of the time, and most (14/23, 61%) reported that they were confident in identifying these emotions. The ethics interest group was more likely to choose empathic responses (P=.002). Participants rated VANESSA as easy to use (22/23, 96%) and reported that she had realistic dialogue (15/23, 65%). CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study shows that a prenatal counseling simulation is feasible and can yield useful data on prenatal counseling communication. Our participants showed a high rate of emotion recognition and empathy in their responses. JMIR Publications 2018-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5970284/ /pubmed/29752249 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/games.9611 Text en ©Patrick Motz, Megan Gray, Taylor Sawyer, Jennifer Kett, Douglas Danforth, Kellen Maicher, Rachel Umoren. Originally published in JMIR Serious Games (http://games.jmir.org), 11.05.2018. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Serious Games, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://games.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Motz, Patrick
Gray, Megan
Sawyer, Taylor
Kett, Jennifer
Danforth, Douglas
Maicher, Kellen
Umoren, Rachel
Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title_full Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title_fullStr Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title_short Virtual Antenatal Encounter and Standardized Simulation Assessment (VANESSA): Pilot Study
title_sort virtual antenatal encounter and standardized simulation assessment (vanessa): pilot study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5970284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29752249
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/games.9611
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