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From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education

In a centralized model of simulation-based education (Ce-SBE), students practice skills in simulation laboratories, while in a decentralized model (De-SBE), they practice skills outside of these laboratories. The cost of “take-home” simulators is a barrier that can be overcome with additive manufact...

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Autores principales: Barth, Brenda, Arutiunian, Artur, Micallef, Julia, Sivanathan, Mithusa, Wang, Zhujiang, Chorney, Dana, Salmers, Elaine, McCabe, Janet, Dubrowski, Adam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9329603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35911310
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.26373
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author Barth, Brenda
Arutiunian, Artur
Micallef, Julia
Sivanathan, Mithusa
Wang, Zhujiang
Chorney, Dana
Salmers, Elaine
McCabe, Janet
Dubrowski, Adam
author_facet Barth, Brenda
Arutiunian, Artur
Micallef, Julia
Sivanathan, Mithusa
Wang, Zhujiang
Chorney, Dana
Salmers, Elaine
McCabe, Janet
Dubrowski, Adam
author_sort Barth, Brenda
collection PubMed
description In a centralized model of simulation-based education (Ce-SBE), students practice skills in simulation laboratories, while in a decentralized model (De-SBE), they practice skills outside of these laboratories. The cost of “take-home” simulators is a barrier that can be overcome with additive manufacturing (AM). Our objective was to develop and evaluate the quality of education when year one nursing students practiced clinical skills from home following normal curricular activities but in the De-SBE format. A group of expert educators, designers, and researchers followed a two-cycle, iterative design-to-cost approach to develop three simulators: wound care and urethral catheterization (male and female). The total cost of manufacturing all three simulators was USD 5,000. These were sent to all year one nursing students who followed an online curriculum. Twenty-nine students completed the survey, which indicated that the simulators supported the students’ learning needs, and several changes were requested to improve the educational value. The results indicate that substituting traditional simulators with AM-simulators provided an acceptable alternative for nursing students to learn wound care and urethral catheterization off-campus in De-SBE. The feedback also provided suggestions to improve each of the simulators to make the experience more authentic.
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spelling pubmed-93296032022-07-28 From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education Barth, Brenda Arutiunian, Artur Micallef, Julia Sivanathan, Mithusa Wang, Zhujiang Chorney, Dana Salmers, Elaine McCabe, Janet Dubrowski, Adam Cureus Medical Simulation In a centralized model of simulation-based education (Ce-SBE), students practice skills in simulation laboratories, while in a decentralized model (De-SBE), they practice skills outside of these laboratories. The cost of “take-home” simulators is a barrier that can be overcome with additive manufacturing (AM). Our objective was to develop and evaluate the quality of education when year one nursing students practiced clinical skills from home following normal curricular activities but in the De-SBE format. A group of expert educators, designers, and researchers followed a two-cycle, iterative design-to-cost approach to develop three simulators: wound care and urethral catheterization (male and female). The total cost of manufacturing all three simulators was USD 5,000. These were sent to all year one nursing students who followed an online curriculum. Twenty-nine students completed the survey, which indicated that the simulators supported the students’ learning needs, and several changes were requested to improve the educational value. The results indicate that substituting traditional simulators with AM-simulators provided an acceptable alternative for nursing students to learn wound care and urethral catheterization off-campus in De-SBE. The feedback also provided suggestions to improve each of the simulators to make the experience more authentic. Cureus 2022-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9329603/ /pubmed/35911310 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.26373 Text en Copyright © 2022, Barth et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Medical Simulation
Barth, Brenda
Arutiunian, Artur
Micallef, Julia
Sivanathan, Mithusa
Wang, Zhujiang
Chorney, Dana
Salmers, Elaine
McCabe, Janet
Dubrowski, Adam
From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title_full From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title_fullStr From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title_full_unstemmed From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title_short From Centralized to Decentralized Model of Simulation-Based Education: Curricular Integration of Take-Home Simulators in Nursing Education
title_sort from centralized to decentralized model of simulation-based education: curricular integration of take-home simulators in nursing education
topic Medical Simulation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9329603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35911310
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.26373
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