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Impact of Unexpected Death in Simulation: Skill Retention, Stress and Emotions

O

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS) Skills
Crisis Resource Management (CRM) Skills
Stress

Treatments

Other: Unexpected death

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03441425
20130171-01H

Details and patient eligibility

About

Some educational researchers deliberately induce stress upon learners to in order to enhance retention; this practice is controversial and its utility must be weighed against the negative emotional effects it may have on participants. In this study we investigate the effect of the unexpected death of a simulation mannequin on the retention of non-technical and technical crisis resource management skills and consider the emotional impact of this acute stressor.

Full description

Background High-fidelity simulation is an increasingly used teaching tool that is proven to be effective for learning. According to the literature, by gradually increasing stress and emotions, more effective learning can be achieved. However, allowing the simulated patient to "die", as a deliberate stressor, is controversial. There is no previous research on the educational effect of letting a simulated patient die. We aim to evaluate the effects of simulated unexpected death on skill retention, stress levels, and emotions. We hypothesize that the occurrence of unexpected death will impact skill retention, and will be associated with higher stress levels and stronger emotions.

Methods After Institutional Research Ethics Board approval, 56 residents and fellows of different medical specialties will be randomized to either the intervention (unexpected death) or control (survive) group. Participants from both groups will have to individually manage a simulated cardiac arrest crisis. In the intervention group, the scenario will end by the death of the simulated patient, whilst in the control group the simulated patient will survive. Each participant will be immediately debriefed by a trained instructor. Three months later, skill retention will be assessed in a similar scenario. Crisis management performance of all scenarios will be rated by 2 blinded raters. Biological stress, cognitive appraisal, and emotions will be measured during both scenarios.

Implications The impact of simulated unexpected death on skill retention of residents and fellows will provide instructors with evidence to optimize scenario design and approach the role of stress and emotions in simulation-based education.

Enrollment

54 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Must be a resident or a fellow in the department of anesthesiology, critical care, emergency medicine, medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, surgery or family medicine at the University of Ottawa or the University of Toronto
  • Participants are requested to refrain from physical strains, smoking, drinking caffeinated or low pH beverages and eating for at least one hour before enrollment
  • Participants will be included between 11 AM and 8 PM, when cortisol levels are most stable

Exclusion criteria

  • Not a resident or fellow in one of the departments indicated above

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

54 participants in 2 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group participants will complete a cardiac arrest simulation scenario on the first day in which the mannequin returns to spontaneous circulation at the end of the scenario. They will then complete a retention simulation session three months later.
Unexpected death
Experimental group
Description:
The experimental group participants will complete a cardiac arrest simulation scenario on the first day in which the mannequin unexpectedly dies at the end of the scenario. They will then complete a retention simulation session three months later.
Treatment:
Other: Unexpected death

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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