4/14/09 1 Background (Sheryl, I thought you might have things you would want to have shared) 2008-2009 Clinical Simulation Survey Results: Trends in Oklahoma Hospitals & Educational Programs 2007 Best Practices in Clinical Simulation Conference: Part I Clinical Simulation Conference 2007 2008 Best Practices in Clinical Simulation Conference: Part II Clinical Simulation Conference 2008 Clinical Simulation Conference 2008
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Clinical Simulation Conference 2007...• Licensed Practical Nurses (29.7%) • Bachelor’s Prepared Nurses (27%) • Other (27%): dieticians, echocardiology technicians, medical
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4/14/09
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2008-2009 Clinical Simulation Survey Results:
Trends in Oklahoma Hospitals & Educational Programs
2007 Best Practices in Clinical Simulation Conference: Part I
Clinical Simulation Conference 2007
2008 Best Practices in Clinical Simulation Conference: Part II
Two Survey Instruments • Developed by OHCWC Simulation Sub-Committee in
November 2008 • Distribution Mechanism: Survey Monkey • Distributed to:
o Allied health and nursing programs through OSRHE, CareerTech, and IONE
o Hospitals through OHA
• Methodology: Triangulated
Data Collection
• Data Collection Timeframe: December 2008 February 2009
Hospital Respondents
• 16 responses, representing 14% of the acute care members of the Oklahoma Hospital Association
• 2 urban, 2 suburban and 10 rural communities were included
• 50% had between 1 and 100 beds
Educational Program Respondents
• 84 responses from 43 nursing programs representing 68% of nursing programs recognized by the Oklahoma Board of Nursing o 9% responses were received from private
nursing programs o 42% of responses were from technology
centers
• 56% had allied health and nursing student populations between 1 and 50
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Educational Program Respondents
Responses were returned from programs preparing students to be:
• Orientation: Emergency Medicine, Nursing Technicians, RNs, and LPNs
• Emergency Preparedness: BLS, ACLS, and PALS education
How is Simulation Used?
Program respondents reported simulation use in:
• Skills lab
• Theory courses • Lab component of clinicals • Remediation • Program recruitment
Simulation Brand and Type Trends* respondents asked to select all that apply
Most Frequently Cited by Hospital Respondents: • Laerdal Nursing Baby
Most Frequently Cited by Program Respondents: • Laerdal Nursing Anne • Laerdal SimMan • Gaumard Noelle
Simulation Purchase Trends
Among Hospital Respondents:
• 50% capital budget, philanthropic gift, or fund raising
• 16.7% complimentary with purchase of other equipment
Among Program Respondents:
• 69% capital budget
• 32.8% grants
• 17.2% operating budget
• Student/Technology fees and hospital-school collaboratives were also reported
Reported Learning Needs: Themes
Hospital Respondents:
• Integrating simulation with caring for/ treating the critically ill patient
• Time and resources to:
o Write and implement scenarios o Integrate simulation into skills assessment
o Clinical judgment and critical thinking activities o Program, run, and use simulation equipment o Conduct effective debriefing sessions
Reported Learning Needs: Themes
Program Respondents: • Components of simulation coordinator job/
role description • Components of fully functional simulation
laboratory • Positioning mannequins for diagnostic
imaging • Time and resources to:
o Write and implement scenarios o Integrate simulation throughout the
curriculum o Program, run, and use simulation
equipment o Conducting effective debriefing sessions
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Comparing Hospital & Educational Program Responses
Among Survey Respondents:
• Clinical simulation seems to be most prevalent in educational programs
• Static mannequins are the most widely used simulator
• Education programs are using a greater variety of simulator types
• Three types of Laerdal simulators were the most frequently purchased simulator
• Programs are beginning to institute fees to offset simulation/technology expenses
• Learning needs of both groups were comparable
Next Steps
• Share data from the 2008-2009 survey
• Host the 2009 Clinical Simulation Conference
• Participate in stakeholder discussions
• Continue: o Environmental scanning in areas o Surveying patient care settings and educational
programs o Working with stakeholders to develop and refine
evidence-based outcomes associated with simulation
• Implement strategies that will result in urban, suburban and rural Oklahoma communities having access to state of the art clinical simulation resources