Simulation training in medical education allows multidisciplinary teams to train in a realistic clinical environment. It helps reduce clinical errors and addresses patient safety issues. Multiple areas can be covered including procedural skills training, communication, teamwork and human factors training. We present a “model of simulation” in education, which is based onRoyalCollegeof Paediatrics and Child HealthUnited Kingdomgeneral paediatric curriculum. Simulation complements the existing neonatal education programme both for doctors and nurses. It has the long-term purpose of achieving higher standards in neonatal care through the training of staff in a structured, multidisciplinary environment. Its quality and impact are subject to feedback from the participants. This has helped in its evolution and development as a multidisciplinary programme.
“The unfamiliar was familiar because it had been encountered many times before.”
These are the words of Liam Donaldson endorsing the need for simulation in training the medical workforce in the United Kingdom as part of the Chief Medical Officers report in 2008 [
Simulation in medical education has been recognised and adopted by a variety of specialties in response to healthcare and safety issues worldwide. It is estimated that in the United States medical errors are the 8th leading cause of death at a cost of $29 billion dollars annually [
Simulation allows multidisciplinary teams to train in an interactive environment facing real clinical scenarios. It helps to develop team work and communication skills across specialties, as well as allow training in rare and complex scenarios [
The Royal College of Paediatrics has not to date published any guidelines or a curriculum under which simulation can be implemented either in paediatrics or neonatology. This has not prevented individual centres from embracing simulation as a modality of education for their teams in paediatrics, paediatric intensive care and neonatal intensive care through the use of existing RCPCH curriculum in the UK.
Significant work has been performed by Fawke et al. in Leicester, where a high fidelity point of care neonatal simulation programme has been established and operated for over 3 years. This programme has been operated in the form of fortnightly sessions that are run by a multidisciplinary team replicating the working environment [
Simulation suites have been developed in centres around the UK. This allows for simulation training outside the working environment but the introduction of an effective “point of care high fidelity simulation programme” remains a challenging prospect that may take years to achieve [
Neonatology involves professionals from multiple different specialties, such as midwifery, nursing, paediatrics, and tertiary specialities, working together. The education and training of these professionals generally occurs separately. Neonatal simulation allows these professionals to train together and work as a team, as they would in the clinical environment.
Traditionally audit and research, e-learning, seminars, lectures, external training courses, reflective practice and self-directed learning have been used for delivery of the neonatal and paediatric curriculum in the United Kingdom. Procedural skills are demonstrated, observed and practiced [7,8]. Programmes such as the Neonatal Life Support course run by the Resuscitation Council use low-fidelity simulation for the acquisition of neonatal resuscitation skills. A high fidelity programme helps complement existing models for the delivery of education. Simulation training can improve outcomes in the clinical setting. Healthcare professionals training with a PROMPT birthing trainer simulator have reported a decrease in the use of harmful delivery interventions for Shoulder Dystocia. This has resulted in better clinical outcomes for neonates with a reduction in neonatal injuries after birth through Shoulder Dystocia after such training was introduced [
In keeping with available evidence and after literature review the potential for the introduction of simulation training in neonatology in Southampton was discussed. A faculty was convened comprising a neonatal consultant and designated specialist registrar who was responsible for identifying target training groups, developing a curriculum, utilizing existing resources and designing scenarios. Two specialist registrars and a nurse lead were trained at the Leicester Neonatal Simulation Instrucor’s Course and the Southampton simulation centre.
The simulation suite and a designated isolation room on the neonatal unit were identified as venues for simulation sessions, and all sessions have been carried out at in these set areas. Scenarios were prepared using the RCPCH curriculum initially addressing common problems of the neonatal airway and breathing and progressing to more complex areas [
Feedback collated from these sessions was used to design a programme involving the year 1 - 8 trainees, neonatal nurse practitioners and nurses on the neonatal unit. A pool of scenarios was prepared. The scenarios were prepared in the context of clinical cases with a predicted clinical course and structured to cover various systems (
High fidelity scenarios were run on the Sim Baby (Laerdal). This mannequin provided the trainees with cues to aid in decision making while the mannequin was programmed to react in realistic ways to the trainees’ interventions. Trainees were challenged to apply the correct intervention to improve the condition of a simulated patient in an environment that attempted to imitate our neonatal unit. Low fidelity scenarios involved using the neonatal Sim Anne (Laerdal). Preterm scenarios involved use of the Simulaid Micropremmie. Low fidelity scenarios were based on communication, organisation or the ability to approach a particular neonatal problem. This scenario’s aimed to address crisis resource management [
Each scenario was run over 60 minutes, with an introduction followed by the simulation sequence and
feedback. The introduction and scenario were run for 20 minutes followed by debriefing and teaching about points raised in the scenario in the remaining time. Feedback was obtained on the sessions and scenarios.
Monthly sessions were planned in advance and carried out as themed sessions covering the neonatal airway, access, respiratory, circulatory, and surgical problems. Sessions included procedural skills training in addition to simulation training on the day. Simulations were tailored to allow participants to enact their roles and assessments as they would on the neonatal unit.
Simulation was piloted on the neonatal unit at Southampton in December 2010. It was run without any funding, and individuals using their own initiative and time did significant work.
A total of 14 sessions were run between December 2010 and December 2011, including 2 regional study days. Health professionals including year 1 - 8 trainees, neonatal nurse practitioners, and nurses participated in the program. Feedback was obtained as in
Certain areas of risk were identified on the neonatal unit, including endotracheal tube fixation and leaking umbilical lines. These issues were addressed con-currently during scenarios and procedural skills training.
The feedback provided also identified areas for improvement. Realism was not always achieved during all of the scenarios because of the absence of a neonatal simulation mannequin. There was difficulty organising the availability and presence of nursing staff, which resulted in a compromised degree of realism and fidelity for certain scenarios. The absence of a multidisciplinary
curriculum and varied learning objectives between different professionals meant that all learning needs might not have been specifically addressed.
Feedback from our programme was collated to produce a business case for a high fidelity neonatal mannequin. The data and the business case was presented to local deanery officials resulting in the purchase of 2 high fidelity simulation mannequins, specifically neonatal mannequins to perform procedures such as line insertion and lumbar puncture.
A dedicated simulation suite, with the availability of high and low fidelity neonatal simulation mannequins (Figures 2 and 3) and appropriately trained faculty, has allowed for the development of a point of care simulation programme.
Existing medical and nursing curriculum is being integrated through curriculum mapping to ensure that training is beneficial to the multidisciplinary groups participating in the sessions. Patient safety issues raised through local clinical governance procedures are also being contemporaneously addressed through the simulation sessions run.
It is expected that a number of neonatal units would like to embrace simulation as a training modality to complement existing models of education for staff. The first step in any programme is identifying existing resources in terms of faculty and simulation infrastructure. There are simulation instructor courses run in Leicester Royal Infirmary and Bristol Education Centre in the United Kingdom catering to nurses and doctors [6,11]. Establishing faculty among the different multidisciplinary group’s nurses, doctors and midwifery broadens the ability to identify the learning needs of different groups as well adapting different curriculum types.
An existing curriculum to draw upon for scenarios along with enthusiastic individuals helps with the next stage. A review of incident reports and serious untoward incidents can help produce scenarios that address issues of risk locally. Simulation training requires dedicated time, and staff needs to be fully involved and familiar with the mannequins and simulation environment. In our experience, a period of prior familiarisation followed by dedicated training days for doctors and nurses, as opposed to work-based learning, ensures better attendance and achievement of desired learning outcomes.
Identifying a suitable environment is paramount. A setting on the neonatal unit will require technology that is compatible with operating the mannequin and should ideally also not disturb day-to-day practice on the neonatal unit Finally, having a high fidelity simulation mannequin is ideal, but not having one should not be a deterrent if other mannequins are available for use. Low fidelity mannequins can be used for team work training and crisis resource management.
Fidelity and Your ProgrammeThere is an emphasis on the use of high fidelity mannequins and the recreation of the exact clinical environment so that individuals obtain the highest degree of learning. Issenberg et al. have identified some of these principles. Simulator validity and providing effective feedback are very important tenets of this emphasis [
Achieving high fidelity in an established simulation programme takes years of hard work, faculty training, and practice. In the formative stages of developing a programme, a compromise in the degree of fidelity is inevitable. It must also be remembered that facilitators are not born with but learn debriefing skills. We must be careful to see that we are achieving desired learning outcomes despite this for staff involved in the training.
This model demonstrates that while aspiring to achieve long term goals of delivering multidisciplinary training through high fidelity simulation, we can encourage learning through modelling scenarios with lesser fidelity but with defined learning objectives. An important aspect of setting up appropriate simulation training scenario’s is designing them so that the degree of fidelity allows participating individuals to come to some desired learning outcomes without feeling cheated by the mannequin and scenario. Debriefing is a critical aspect of this process, and feedback about the scenarios is a major driver for improvement. Designing a few scenarios that can be practised and piloted with feedback has worked well in our set up. We provide 2 sample scenarios below, in Tables 2 and 3.
Having curriculum-based scenarios that are credible, observed clinically, and reproducible in your structured environment will be much more successful in achieving a desired learning outcome [11,12]. We run a scenario based on the approach to delivery of the extreme preterm neonate on a low fidelity micropremmie doll (
On the other hand, situations involving decision making based on clinical assessment and recognition of dynamic changes are better performed on a high fidelity simulator. Examples of this in our programme are the resuscitation of a neonate with respiratory distress (
Learning objectives for different professionals might be the same or different using the same scenario. The difficulty of the scenario and the competency of the individuals involved need to be kept in mind [
be the diagnosis of a blocked or displaced endotracheal tube; however, issues with teamwork, behavior or knowledge of one’s own limitations might emerge as individual learning outcomes.
Currently, there is no defined curriculum for multidisciplinary training in neonatology in the United Kingdom. This means that the learning objectives defined for scenarios based on the RCPCH curriculum [
Established programmes of international repute include the Centre for advanced pediatric and perinatal education based at Stanford University. Simulation is delivered as courses covering the neonatal, paediatric and obstetric domains [
Neonatal simulation training is not used for formal accreditation of competencies in our programme. The approach is to use it as complementary to other methods of training, not for assessment. The focus is on human factors training, multidisciplinary team work and communication and discussing medical errors. At present models, task trainers and neonatal high fidelity patient simulators may be useful for assessment of clinical practice in neonatology [9-12], but there needs to be a specialty specific formal evaluation of validity, reliability, and feasibility in their use for formal accreditation of competencies and assessment. At this point in time an effective model for assessment using the above is lacking.
With different programs having different methods of using and implementing simulation in neonatology maintaining a standard to ensure participants are achieving learning is important. All our scenarios are curriculum based. As a minimum in order to ensure quality of sessions we try to ensure the presence of both nurses and doctors to participate in their roles, plausible scenarios and 2 or more facilitators to run each session. Feedback is taken for all sessions. All of our nurses are expected to rotate through the sessions over 18 months while all junior doctors rotate every 6 months. An audit of sessions arranged in 2012 showed that there were 2 facilitators for 100% of sessions and 82% of sessions were multidisciplinary sessions. Obtaining feedback is an important to help improve upon the sessions and running of the programme. Having experienced facilitators is very important. At present all instructors in paediatric simulation in Southampton are trained through established simulation programmes such as those run in Leicester by Fawke et al. [
Introducing simulation in any form requires significant resources, time, motivation and effort to change the learning mindset of individuals who have not participated in this type of training before. Neonatal simulation allows multidisciplinary teams to develop skills on a safe acceptable substitute for the patient while aspiring for excellence in neonatal care. We propose simulation as an important adjunct to other methods in neonatal education and provide a model for the same. This model is reproducible, curriculum based with the objectives of trying to achieve higher standards in multidisciplinary team care.
I would like to thank the following individuals who have been involved with the inception of the pilot programme Dr. S Francis, Dr. Helen Fielder, Dr. R Ungureanu, and Dr. David Burge.