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Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine

INTRODUCTION: This simulation case was designed to evaluate the ability of third- and fourth-year emergency medicine clerkship students and acting interns to perform the tasks outlined in the Association of American Medical College's Core Entrustable Professional Activity 10, to “recognize a pa...

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Autores principales: Dora-Laskey, Aaron, Sule, Harsh, Moadel, Tiffany, Kman, Nicholas, Thompson, Laura, Hess, Jamie, Yarris, Lalena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Association of American Medical Colleges 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6440403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30984854
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10512
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author Dora-Laskey, Aaron
Sule, Harsh
Moadel, Tiffany
Kman, Nicholas
Thompson, Laura
Hess, Jamie
Yarris, Lalena
author_facet Dora-Laskey, Aaron
Sule, Harsh
Moadel, Tiffany
Kman, Nicholas
Thompson, Laura
Hess, Jamie
Yarris, Lalena
author_sort Dora-Laskey, Aaron
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: This simulation case was designed to evaluate the ability of third- and fourth-year emergency medicine clerkship students and acting interns to perform the tasks outlined in the Association of American Medical College's Core Entrustable Professional Activity 10, to “recognize a patient requiring urgent or emergent care and initiate evaluation and management.” The overarching goal is to assess medical students’ ability to recognize and take steps to stabilize a sick patient. METHODS: In this case, students encounter a physician, simulated with a high-fidelity manikin, who has suddenly become confused. Students are expected to recognize that he is acutely ill, call for help, and begin the initial steps of resuscitation. Bedside testing reveals hypoglycemia, which students are expected to treat. Further examination, history gathering, and diagnostic tests reveal that the patient is suffering from gram-negative sepsis. Students are evaluated on their ability to recognize signs of serious illness, call for appropriate help, perform critical assessment and treatment tasks, communicate their findings to an attending physician, and determine the appropriate patient disposition. Outcomes are measured using critical action checklists. RESULTS: Initial trials of this case demonstrated its feasibility. All 13 students who have participated in this session have identified all five critical actions. DISCUSSION: In later iterations, the number of roles was streamlined in order to reduce how many personnel were required. As a result of the very high critical-actions success rates of the first two groups of students tested, our case-specific checklist was revised with the goal of improving its discriminatory power.
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spelling pubmed-64404032019-04-12 Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine Dora-Laskey, Aaron Sule, Harsh Moadel, Tiffany Kman, Nicholas Thompson, Laura Hess, Jamie Yarris, Lalena MedEdPORTAL Original Publication INTRODUCTION: This simulation case was designed to evaluate the ability of third- and fourth-year emergency medicine clerkship students and acting interns to perform the tasks outlined in the Association of American Medical College's Core Entrustable Professional Activity 10, to “recognize a patient requiring urgent or emergent care and initiate evaluation and management.” The overarching goal is to assess medical students’ ability to recognize and take steps to stabilize a sick patient. METHODS: In this case, students encounter a physician, simulated with a high-fidelity manikin, who has suddenly become confused. Students are expected to recognize that he is acutely ill, call for help, and begin the initial steps of resuscitation. Bedside testing reveals hypoglycemia, which students are expected to treat. Further examination, history gathering, and diagnostic tests reveal that the patient is suffering from gram-negative sepsis. Students are evaluated on their ability to recognize signs of serious illness, call for appropriate help, perform critical assessment and treatment tasks, communicate their findings to an attending physician, and determine the appropriate patient disposition. Outcomes are measured using critical action checklists. RESULTS: Initial trials of this case demonstrated its feasibility. All 13 students who have participated in this session have identified all five critical actions. DISCUSSION: In later iterations, the number of roles was streamlined in order to reduce how many personnel were required. As a result of the very high critical-actions success rates of the first two groups of students tested, our case-specific checklist was revised with the goal of improving its discriminatory power. Association of American Medical Colleges 2016-12-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6440403/ /pubmed/30984854 http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10512 Text en Copyright © 2016 Dora-Laskey et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode This is an open-access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode) license.
spellingShingle Original Publication
Dora-Laskey, Aaron
Sule, Harsh
Moadel, Tiffany
Kman, Nicholas
Thompson, Laura
Hess, Jamie
Yarris, Lalena
Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title_full Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title_fullStr Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title_short Entrustable Professional Activity 10: Recognizing the Acutely Ill Patient—A Delirium Simulated Case for Students in Emergency Medicine
title_sort entrustable professional activity 10: recognizing the acutely ill patient—a delirium simulated case for students in emergency medicine
topic Original Publication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6440403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30984854
http://dx.doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10512
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