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Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied

BACKGROUND: In health care, teamwork skills are critical for patient safety; therefore, great emphasis is placed on training these skills. Given that training is increasingly designed in a blended way, serious games may offer an efficient method of preparing face-to-face simulation training of these...

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Autores principales: van Peppen, Lara, Faber, Tjitske J E, Erasmus, Vicki, Dankbaar, Mary E W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9789497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36485016
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38009
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author van Peppen, Lara
Faber, Tjitske J E
Erasmus, Vicki
Dankbaar, Mary E W
author_facet van Peppen, Lara
Faber, Tjitske J E
Erasmus, Vicki
Dankbaar, Mary E W
author_sort van Peppen, Lara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In health care, teamwork skills are critical for patient safety; therefore, great emphasis is placed on training these skills. Given that training is increasingly designed in a blended way, serious games may offer an efficient method of preparing face-to-face simulation training of these procedural skills. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate the teamwork principles that were used during gameplay by medical students and teamwork experts. Findings can improve our understanding of the potential of serious games for training these complex skills. METHODS: We investigated a web-based multiplayer game designed for training students’ interprofessional teamwork skills. During gameplay, 4 players in different roles (physician, nurse, medical student, and student nurse) had to share information, prioritize tasks, and decide on next steps to take in web-based patient scenarios, using one-to-one and team chats. We performed a qualitative study (content analysis) on these chats with 144 fifth-year medical students and 24 health care teamwork experts (as a benchmark study) playing the game in groups of 4. Game chat data from 2 scenarios were analyzed. For the analysis, a deductive approach was used, starting with a conceptual framework based on Crew Resource Management principles, including shared situational awareness, decision-making, communication, team management, and debriefing. RESULTS: Results showed that most teamwork principles were used during gameplay: shared situational awareness, decision-making (eg, re-evaluation), communication (eg, closed loop), and team management (eg, distributing the workload). Among students, these principles were often used on a basic level. Among experts, teamwork principles were used with more open forms of speak up and more justification of decisions. Some specific Crew Resource Management principles were less observed among both groups, for example, prevention of fixation errors and use of cognitive aids. Both groups showed relatively superficial debriefing reflections. CONCLUSIONS: Playing a multiplayer game for interprofessional teamwork appears to facilitate the application of teamwork principles by students in all important teamwork domains on a basic level. Expert players applied similar teamwork principles on a moderately high complexity level. Some teamwork principles were less observed among both students and expert groups, probably owing to the artifacts of the game environment (eg, chatting instead of talking). A multiplayer game for teamwork training can elicit the application of important, basic teamwork principles, both among novices and experts, and provides them with a flexible, accessible, and engaging learning environment. This may create time for exercising more complex skills during face-to-face training.
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spelling pubmed-97894972022-12-25 Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied van Peppen, Lara Faber, Tjitske J E Erasmus, Vicki Dankbaar, Mary E W JMIR Serious Games Original Paper BACKGROUND: In health care, teamwork skills are critical for patient safety; therefore, great emphasis is placed on training these skills. Given that training is increasingly designed in a blended way, serious games may offer an efficient method of preparing face-to-face simulation training of these procedural skills. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate the teamwork principles that were used during gameplay by medical students and teamwork experts. Findings can improve our understanding of the potential of serious games for training these complex skills. METHODS: We investigated a web-based multiplayer game designed for training students’ interprofessional teamwork skills. During gameplay, 4 players in different roles (physician, nurse, medical student, and student nurse) had to share information, prioritize tasks, and decide on next steps to take in web-based patient scenarios, using one-to-one and team chats. We performed a qualitative study (content analysis) on these chats with 144 fifth-year medical students and 24 health care teamwork experts (as a benchmark study) playing the game in groups of 4. Game chat data from 2 scenarios were analyzed. For the analysis, a deductive approach was used, starting with a conceptual framework based on Crew Resource Management principles, including shared situational awareness, decision-making, communication, team management, and debriefing. RESULTS: Results showed that most teamwork principles were used during gameplay: shared situational awareness, decision-making (eg, re-evaluation), communication (eg, closed loop), and team management (eg, distributing the workload). Among students, these principles were often used on a basic level. Among experts, teamwork principles were used with more open forms of speak up and more justification of decisions. Some specific Crew Resource Management principles were less observed among both groups, for example, prevention of fixation errors and use of cognitive aids. Both groups showed relatively superficial debriefing reflections. CONCLUSIONS: Playing a multiplayer game for interprofessional teamwork appears to facilitate the application of teamwork principles by students in all important teamwork domains on a basic level. Expert players applied similar teamwork principles on a moderately high complexity level. Some teamwork principles were less observed among both students and expert groups, probably owing to the artifacts of the game environment (eg, chatting instead of talking). A multiplayer game for teamwork training can elicit the application of important, basic teamwork principles, both among novices and experts, and provides them with a flexible, accessible, and engaging learning environment. This may create time for exercising more complex skills during face-to-face training. JMIR Publications 2022-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9789497/ /pubmed/36485016 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38009 Text en ©Lara van Peppen, Tjitske J E Faber, Vicki Erasmus, Mary E W Dankbaar. Originally published in JMIR Serious Games (https://games.jmir.org), 09.12.2022. 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 https://games.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
van Peppen, Lara
Faber, Tjitske J E
Erasmus, Vicki
Dankbaar, Mary E W
Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title_full Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title_fullStr Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title_full_unstemmed Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title_short Teamwork Training With a Multiplayer Game in Health Care: Content Analysis of the Teamwork Principles Applied
title_sort teamwork training with a multiplayer game in health care: content analysis of the teamwork principles applied
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9789497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36485016
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/38009
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