Skip to Main Content

Simulation at Yale 2022: Adapting to the changing educational and health care landscape

January 28, 2022

The panel discussion will focus on the simulation curriculum for Yale medical students from their first week of medical school until graduation as well as the role of simulation education during the COVID pandemic. Simulation fellows and Yale medical students join the panel discussion.

ID
7382

Transcript

  • 00:13Welcome to simulation at Yale 2022.
  • 00:17Adapting to the changing educational
  • 00:19and healthcare landscape,
  • 00:21there will be time for Q&A.
  • 00:23At the end of the session,
  • 00:24please use the chat feature
  • 00:26at the bottom of your screen
  • 00:27to submit any questions.
  • 00:29This session is being recorded.
  • 00:35Hello and welcome to the second
  • 00:37webinar in our inaugural innovation
  • 00:39in Medical Education series.
  • 00:41As you just heard,
  • 00:43today's topic is simulation at Yale in 2022.
  • 00:46Adapting to the changing educational and
  • 00:49healthcare landscape I am Jessica Lucy,
  • 00:51the deputy Dean for education at
  • 00:53the School of Medicine and I want
  • 00:55to thank you for taking time out
  • 00:56of your day to join us for an in
  • 00:59depth presentation and discussion
  • 01:00of how innovations and stimulation
  • 01:02are being used in our curriculum.
  • 01:04To enhance learning.
  • 01:06With health care and educational technology
  • 01:09changing at such a rapid pace, we are.
  • 01:13We are prioritizing our
  • 01:15investment in our faculty,
  • 01:16students and curriculum to ensure Yale School
  • 01:19of Medicine is a leader in this space,
  • 01:22I'd now like to introduce Michael Schwartz,
  • 01:24our associate Dean,
  • 01:26for the curriculum and newly appointed
  • 01:28Director of Innovation in Medical Education.
  • 01:31Mike is leading our efforts to re
  • 01:33Envision and expand how we use
  • 01:35technology and other tools to meet the
  • 01:38needs of our changing learners in an
  • 01:40ever evolving healthcare landscape.
  • 01:42With that I'll turn it over to Mike.
  • 01:45Thanks, Mike.
  • 01:46Thank you Jessica and thank you to
  • 01:48all of you for joining us tonight.
  • 01:50I'm I'm very excited to be able to
  • 01:53introduce this second session in our series,
  • 01:55which will focus, as Jessica mentioned
  • 01:58on simulation and medical education.
  • 02:01Tonight you will hear and experience how
  • 02:03simulation has been integrated across
  • 02:05all phases of our medical educational
  • 02:07programs and you'll hear about the
  • 02:10creativity and the leadership that
  • 02:11the simulation team has brought not
  • 02:14only to medical education at Yale,
  • 02:16but also across the country and
  • 02:18even to our community in New Haven.
  • 02:20Through innovative outreach programs.
  • 02:22To lead us on this journey of
  • 02:25innovation and creativity,
  • 02:27it is my great pleasure
  • 02:29to introduce Lee Evans.
  • 02:31Doctor Lee Evans is the inaugural director
  • 02:33of the Yale Center for Medical Simulation,
  • 02:36which he founded in 2015.
  • 02:38Lee is an associate professor.
  • 02:41In simulation section,
  • 02:42chief and emergency medicine at Yale
  • 02:45School of Medicine and she's been the
  • 02:47executive director of the Yale Center
  • 02:49for Medical Education since its inception.
  • 02:52She has been the recipient
  • 02:53of multiple teaching awards,
  • 02:54including the Banfa Teaching Award,
  • 02:57the Alvan,
  • 02:58Feinstein Teaching Award,
  • 02:59and she is currently the principal
  • 03:02investigator of an AHRQ grant
  • 03:05focused on adaptive simulation
  • 03:07interventions to reduce COVID induced
  • 03:09stress on health care workers.
  • 03:12So it's not to take away from this great
  • 03:14the time of this great presentation,
  • 03:16Lee.
  • 03:16I'm going to turn the baton over to you.
  • 03:20OK, thanks Mike.
  • 03:21I'm going to share my screen.
  • 03:36So thank you for joining us for
  • 03:38the 2nd innovations in Medical
  • 03:40Education Webinar tonight.
  • 03:41The faculty at the Yale Center
  • 03:43for Medical Simulation and three
  • 03:45medical students plan to expose you
  • 03:47to all of the innovative simulation
  • 03:49opportunities we offer for our students.
  • 03:52In 2009, Chesley Sullenberger was able
  • 03:54to do an emergency landing of his US
  • 03:57Airways plane on the Hudson River,
  • 03:59saving the lives of many of his passengers.
  • 04:02He attributed his success to his extensive
  • 04:05previous simulated flight training.
  • 04:07Similarly, we at the Yale Center for
  • 04:10Medical Simulation use simulation
  • 04:11education to train students to primarily
  • 04:14manage acute clinical problems in a
  • 04:17patient safe environment that they
  • 04:19would never have the opportunity
  • 04:21to do in the hospital setting.
  • 04:23The mission of the Yale Center for
  • 04:25Medical Simulation is to provide
  • 04:27excellent patient care and health
  • 04:29care delivery through innovative
  • 04:30medical education assessment,
  • 04:32research and outreach.
  • 04:35Earlier this month we received
  • 04:37notification that Yale Center for
  • 04:39Medical Simulation has received
  • 04:41full accreditation from the Society
  • 04:43for Simulation and Health Care.
  • 04:44In all, 5 program Areas,
  • 04:47Assessment fellowship,
  • 04:48research systems integration and teaching,
  • 04:52and education.
  • 04:55The Yale Center for Medical Simulation
  • 04:57is located at 728 Howard Ave,
  • 04:59one block away from both the
  • 05:01Sterling Hall of Medicine and the
  • 05:02York Street campus of Yale,
  • 05:04New Haven Hospital.
  • 05:05This provides an ideal location
  • 05:07for easy access to the Center
  • 05:09for medical students during their
  • 05:11entire four years of medical school.
  • 05:13Our state of the art facility
  • 05:14opened in January of 2015.
  • 05:18I traveled throughout the country to visit
  • 05:20multiple different simulation centers.
  • 05:21When we're in the process
  • 05:23of developing our plan,
  • 05:24we eventually chose to hire HGA
  • 05:26architects from Minneapolis,
  • 05:28who also built the simulation
  • 05:30center at the Mayo Clinic.
  • 05:32YCMS is a 5000 square foot space.
  • 05:34I'm not going to take you on a virtual tour.
  • 05:39Our interest is on Howard Ave and
  • 05:41students are able to gain access
  • 05:43to YCMS with their Yale ID's.
  • 05:45We have three full time staff members,
  • 05:47Joy Grabo, our simulation supervisor
  • 05:50Luis Cruz and Jeff Hoffman are
  • 05:53simulation operation specialists.
  • 05:55There are four simulation rooms
  • 05:56in each room there is a high
  • 05:59fidelity manikin simulator.
  • 06:00Their computer controlled mechanical
  • 06:02simulators that mimic human Physiology and
  • 06:05display symptoms and disease processes.
  • 06:08As they present in an actual patient,
  • 06:10they can speak, blink their eyes.
  • 06:13They have palpable pulses,
  • 06:14lung and heart sounds.
  • 06:16During the scenario,
  • 06:17there is a faculty member in the control
  • 06:20room along with a simulation specialist.
  • 06:22Yale faculty do not require sophisticated
  • 06:25simulation computer skills to use YCMS.
  • 06:28We create the computer programming
  • 06:30based on their learning objectives.
  • 06:32We have designed over 200 scenarios with
  • 06:35learning objectives and critical actions.
  • 06:38Critical actions are divided into
  • 06:40clinical management and teamwork
  • 06:42and communication categories.
  • 06:44We included a simulated OR scrub room
  • 06:46for students to practice learning how
  • 06:48to enter the OR during the pre suit
  • 06:50precede for their surgery clerkships.
  • 06:57Our procedure room allows students to
  • 06:59practice a variety of invasive procedures.
  • 07:01We have all the ultrasound machines
  • 07:03available to students in the hospital.
  • 07:06And students use partial task trainers.
  • 07:09To perform slit lamp exams practice
  • 07:13advanced airway management.
  • 07:15Lumbar punctures central venous catheter
  • 07:19insertions and ultrasound guided Ivs.
  • 07:28Our pediatric simulations require
  • 07:30the most diverse group of simulators.
  • 07:33We have a newborn infant and
  • 07:36child high fidelity simulators.
  • 07:38We also have a SIM mom for
  • 07:40obstetrical emergencies.
  • 07:41We have all of the required equipment
  • 07:43for management of pediatric patients.
  • 07:51So in 2022, the key question facing medical
  • 07:54educators is who controls medical education?
  • 07:58It is becoming more and more clear that
  • 08:00medical students want to control the
  • 08:02sources of their education and be more
  • 08:04involved in the self learning process
  • 08:05early in their medical education.
  • 08:08Students are outsourcing their.
  • 08:12Formal curriculum with additional
  • 08:13resources like boards and beyond.
  • 08:15Lectures, Anki, flash cards, etc.
  • 08:19Simulation training offers students
  • 08:21unique educational opportunities not
  • 08:23available online yet still designed
  • 08:25and taught by Yale faculty both in
  • 08:27the pre clerkship curriculum and
  • 08:29while on the clinical services.
  • 08:34The COVID pandemic posed a
  • 08:36challenge to Yale Medical School,
  • 08:38and Weiss EMS responded to this
  • 08:40challenge in March of 2020,
  • 08:42medical schools across the country
  • 08:44needed to temporarily suspend hospital
  • 08:46based clerkship rotations due to
  • 08:48both the potential shortage of PPE
  • 08:50and the need for social distancing.
  • 08:52Yale Medical School responded by offering
  • 08:55electives to the clerkship students.
  • 08:58We created a six week course for 48
  • 09:02students while YCMS was closed to in person.
  • 09:04Learning.
  • 09:05The course immediately fill.
  • 09:09We converted our high fidelity manikin
  • 09:11simulation into a fully online
  • 09:13virtual Tele simulation format.
  • 09:15We were able to provide an immersive
  • 09:18Tele simulation curriculum
  • 09:19for widely dispersed students.
  • 09:21Some of the students in this.
  • 09:24Simulation encounter we're in New Haven,
  • 09:26others were in Los Angeles,
  • 09:27and some were in New York City.
  • 09:29We used a zoom platform and the
  • 09:32students communicated with each
  • 09:34other and the nurse using the
  • 09:35chat box as seen on the right.
  • 09:38Students participated in 12
  • 09:40scenarios over these six weeks.
  • 09:42We use scenarios from our scenario
  • 09:44banks so that we didn't disrupt
  • 09:46the curriculum for students when
  • 09:47they returned to their clerkships.
  • 09:49We determined that the maximum
  • 09:51number of students participating
  • 09:53in a virtual simulation was three.
  • 09:56We were able to disseminate
  • 09:57our virtual program.
  • 09:58During the course,
  • 10:00we invited medical educators
  • 10:01from the 13 school consortium
  • 10:04to observe a Tele simulation.
  • 10:06We presented the program at the
  • 10:09international webinar organized
  • 10:10through Cornell Weill Medical School.
  • 10:12And we offered a workshop on medical
  • 10:15student to stimulation during
  • 10:16last year's international meeting
  • 10:18for stimulation and health care.
  • 10:20We published our program as an
  • 10:22innovative report in academic
  • 10:24medicine in October of 2021.
  • 10:27So we'd like to spend the remainder
  • 10:29of this evening highlighting how YCMS
  • 10:32meets its missions in the areas of education,
  • 10:34research, and outreach.
  • 10:38Yale School of Medicine has the largest
  • 10:41high fidelity manikin simulation
  • 10:43curriculum of any US medical school.
  • 10:46All medical students matriculate ING this
  • 10:48year in 2021 will care for at least 39
  • 10:52stimulated patients prior to graduation.
  • 10:55These acutely ill patients have diagnosis,
  • 10:57ranging from an acute MI ruptured
  • 11:00abdominal aortic aneurysm gunshot
  • 11:02wound to the chest and eclampsia.
  • 11:05They not only need to manage the patient,
  • 11:07but they also must consult the
  • 11:09appropriate inpatient service and
  • 11:11explain to the patient and family
  • 11:13members the diagnosis and plan.
  • 11:15Because of the acuity of illness,
  • 11:17students would never be able to primarily
  • 11:19manage these patients in the hospital.
  • 11:21If they choose to do a simulation elective
  • 11:24during the final 18 months of medical school,
  • 11:26they will participate in an
  • 11:28additional 25 scenarios.
  • 11:32During the first two weeks of medical school,
  • 11:34all of the students take care
  • 11:36of their first patient at YCMS.
  • 11:40Nancy Angoff, the prior Dean of students,
  • 11:43initially approached me about including
  • 11:44a simulation in I Pro in order to
  • 11:47instill a sense of professionalism
  • 11:48in the students by taking care of a
  • 11:50quote patient early in their career.
  • 11:52We weren't certain how it would be received,
  • 11:54or if they would have the skills
  • 11:56necessary to care for a patient.
  • 11:58The students have been consistently
  • 12:00outstanding in their empathy
  • 12:01and bedside manner,
  • 12:03so that now the simulation is
  • 12:05an integral part of the course.
  • 12:07Just a few of the comments by
  • 12:10medical students this year.
  • 12:11This was one of the highlights of a I pro.
  • 12:14It was an incredibly uncomfortable
  • 12:15initially being thrown in as the
  • 12:18simulated patients physicians,
  • 12:19but it was incredibly meaningful.
  • 12:21It was an emotional experience
  • 12:22that helped me understand what it's
  • 12:24like to not know the answers and
  • 12:26still be able to respond to the
  • 12:27patient the needs of the patients.
  • 12:2910 out of 10 recommend for future
  • 12:32I Pro courses. This was amazing.
  • 12:34It was the moment that made medical school
  • 12:37really feel most real for me so far.
  • 12:39I absolutely loved the ability to get
  • 12:41started to start getting experience
  • 12:44within the clinical typesetting,
  • 12:45receive personalized and helpful feedback,
  • 12:48and work to try to apply what we already
  • 12:50started learning over the past two weeks.
  • 12:52I can't wait to get back in there.
  • 12:57Consistent feedback from students has been
  • 12:59that they want more stimulation during the
  • 13:02pre clerkship portion of medical school.
  • 13:04This year we have started a pre clerkship
  • 13:07curriculum led by Doctor Sam Buck,
  • 13:09a new member of the YCMS faculty who just
  • 13:12completed a Sam simulation faculty Dr
  • 13:14Bucks not able to be here tonight because
  • 13:17he's at Disney World with his family.
  • 13:19And the students are going to be
  • 13:22participating in eight cases throughout
  • 13:24the pre clerkship curriculum.
  • 13:266 cases during their first year
  • 13:28and two during the second year.
  • 13:30They have been integrated into
  • 13:32the master courses.
  • 13:34Doctor Buck and I have collaborated with
  • 13:36the Master course directors to determine
  • 13:38educational goals and objectives.
  • 13:40The Scientifics Foundation master course
  • 13:43held its first simulation in the fall,
  • 13:46where students manage an infant with
  • 13:49an inboard error of metabolism.
  • 13:52The cases are designed to illustrate clinical
  • 13:55presentations of recent course material.
  • 13:57It has integrated Physiology and
  • 13:59pharmacology built into each scenario.
  • 14:02The communication objectives can
  • 14:03include anything from addressing.
  • 14:05Challenging social interactions,
  • 14:06can fresh,
  • 14:07confronting inequities in medicine
  • 14:09and health counseling for patients
  • 14:12during the debriefing session,
  • 14:13all of the relevant Physiology and
  • 14:16pathology for each case or distance
  • 14:18guest as well as communication,
  • 14:20critical thinking,
  • 14:21teamwork and professionalism.
  • 14:27We needed to advise us we needed to
  • 14:29devise a format to be able to have
  • 14:32the entire class participate in
  • 14:33these scenarios and one afternoon
  • 14:35we devised a format where in which
  • 14:38we simultaneously run 4 rooms with
  • 14:41four students in each room in the
  • 14:43clinical evaluation group at YCMS
  • 14:46and the remaining 12 students in
  • 14:48a virtual clinical reasoning group
  • 14:49led by a faculty facilitator.
  • 14:51This has allows us to have
  • 14:53the entire class go through.
  • 14:55A simulation in one afternoon
  • 14:56in proximity to what they're
  • 14:57learning in the classroom.
  • 15:01This is a video clip from our first
  • 15:04simulation session last fall.
  • 15:05In the background is a mother with
  • 15:08her newborn baby who presents with
  • 15:10lethargy and poor peel intake.
  • 15:12Students are reviewing the lab
  • 15:14results and are about to realize the
  • 15:16baby has an elevated ammonia level.
  • 15:20So somewhat normal, yeah.
  • 15:22Open any changes.
  • 15:24Is there some reactive?
  • 15:29Lactic acid Tony.
  • 15:35We're gonna notice that they all pull out
  • 15:37their iPhones to interpret these results.
  • 15:39We encourage them to use the electronic
  • 15:42resources that they have available to them.
  • 15:58Yeah, yeah. Top six so yeah.
  • 16:13The majority of the simulation sessions
  • 16:14occur on the clinical clerkships.
  • 16:17Doctor Melissa Joseph,
  • 16:18who is our director of resident simulation
  • 16:20at YCMS and Doctor Ambrose Wong,
  • 16:23director of Simulation Research,
  • 16:24will discuss our clerkship
  • 16:26simulation program.
  • 16:32Alright, so first we're gonna
  • 16:34start off with a video of one
  • 16:36of the simulation scenarios that
  • 16:38the students participated in.
  • 16:41I don't think we'll play the whole thing,
  • 16:43but just to give you an idea.
  • 16:49Oh, you know what? We're not
  • 16:50going to have audio because.
  • 16:54Lee, do you wanna unmute yourself?
  • 17:06I think we lost the video audio just
  • 17:08because Doctor Evans was on mute,
  • 17:09but that was gonna try again.
  • 17:16There's a video clip of the
  • 17:18group of students managing
  • 17:20me. There we go.
  • 17:27I'm not moving. Like
  • 17:32that's an STL. Yeah. We talked.
  • 17:38We'll give him aspirin. Oh God.
  • 17:45I'll, I'll check to see if it's happening.
  • 17:47Computer aspirin, Nitro and.
  • 17:51Listen to this. That is called.
  • 17:56OK, I think we can go to the next slide.
  • 18:00So the students participate in
  • 18:02simulation every Friday while they're on
  • 18:04their twelve week combined
  • 18:06M and surgery clerkship,
  • 18:07and then additionally they participate
  • 18:09on Tuesdays during the emergency
  • 18:11medicine portion of their rotation.
  • 18:13The participating groups are limited
  • 18:14to about four to five students,
  • 18:16so you'll typically run 2 simultaneous
  • 18:18simulation sessions and then we'll
  • 18:19debrief them together and it gives
  • 18:21us an opportunity to compare what
  • 18:22happened between the two rooms.
  • 18:24Next slide.
  • 18:27SIM allows the students to practice
  • 18:30application analysis and evaluation,
  • 18:32furthering the knowledge that
  • 18:34they've gathered on their pre
  • 18:35clerkship years and rotations.
  • 18:37Beyond just understanding and remembering
  • 18:39like they may encounter on their exams.
  • 18:43This allows them to practice
  • 18:44leading a patient care team before
  • 18:46having to do so at the bedside.
  • 18:48Next slide.
  • 18:50In addition to application
  • 18:51of clinical knowledge,
  • 18:52simulation allows us to practice and
  • 18:54debrief challenging team dynamics,
  • 18:56important interpersonal interactions,
  • 18:57and conversations with patients and family,
  • 19:00and conflict resolution strategies.
  • 19:03Students also practice consulting
  • 19:05other services and get direct
  • 19:07feedback and guidance on these
  • 19:09conversations during the debrief.
  • 19:11Next line.
  • 19:13We can also utilize simulation
  • 19:15to practice interprofessional E
  • 19:16across departments and roles,
  • 19:18and to practice theory and strategies
  • 19:21on how to effectively lead a team.
  • 19:23Next slide.
  • 19:27A few example cases from their clerkships
  • 19:29include amazing trick ischaemia case
  • 19:31where the ideal treatment plan is for
  • 19:33comfort care and the students must
  • 19:35counsel the patient and her daughter.
  • 19:36A gunshot wound to the chest that
  • 19:38requires a chest tube and a case of
  • 19:41interpersonal violence where they must
  • 19:43manage an escalating significant other.
  • 19:45They also have a case of managing atrial
  • 19:48fibrillation with rapid ventricular
  • 19:50response and many other scenarios.
  • 19:52Next slide.
  • 19:54In order to push to the next
  • 19:56level of knowledge and to manage
  • 19:57these challenging scenarios,
  • 19:58we're asking the students to really
  • 20:00step outside their comfort zone and to
  • 20:02make mistakes and to do so in front of
  • 20:04their peers and their teaching faculty.
  • 20:06Thus, a sense of physiologic of
  • 20:08psychological safety is imperative to
  • 20:10the success of the simulation session,
  • 20:12and we spend a dedicated session
  • 20:14before the rotation,
  • 20:15and then a briefer reminder before
  • 20:17each session to discuss some
  • 20:19of the important ground rules.
  • 20:20The first is the basic assumption that
  • 20:22we believe everyone participating
  • 20:24in our activities is intelligent,
  • 20:26capable,
  • 20:26and cares about doing their best
  • 20:28and wanting to improve.
  • 20:30The second is that the sessions
  • 20:31are all formative.
  • 20:32They're really purely for
  • 20:33the students growth,
  • 20:34and they're not evaluated
  • 20:36during these sessions.
  • 20:37We subscribe to the Vegas
  • 20:39Rules of Simulation.
  • 20:40We don't discuss things that happen
  • 20:43within the simulation outside
  • 20:44of the group that participated.
  • 20:46This psychological safety really allows
  • 20:48the students to put themselves out there to,
  • 20:51you know,
  • 20:52make mistakes,
  • 20:52and to really step up to the
  • 20:55next performance level.
  • 20:57The psychological safety is also
  • 20:59dependent on a very skilled debrief,
  • 21:01which is arguably the most
  • 21:02important part of the session,
  • 21:04and I'm going to turn it over to
  • 21:05Doctor Wong to talk about that.
  • 21:09Thanks Doctor Joseph,
  • 21:10pleasure to be here and really
  • 21:12excited to talk to you all.
  • 21:14I'm like Doctor Joseph said debriefing is
  • 21:16sort of our counterpart to simulation,
  • 21:19to the immersive simulation experience
  • 21:20and we as wise seems really feel that
  • 21:23debriefing is in some ways even more
  • 21:25important than the actual simulation
  • 21:27experience itself as a way to really
  • 21:29consolidate knowledge and a way for us
  • 21:31to really get our future students to
  • 21:33understand the complexity of what it's
  • 21:35like to manage these patients in real life.
  • 21:37And what the implications might be for them
  • 21:39when they're actually in clinical practice.
  • 21:42Here's an example of Doctor Barnes here,
  • 21:43debriefing our learner group
  • 21:45and thinking about our critical
  • 21:48resuscitation as an example.
  • 21:49Next slide, please.
  • 21:51And what we really think about with
  • 21:54debriefing is actually fundamentally
  • 21:56driven by experiential learning,
  • 21:59which was developed by David Cole,
  • 22:00who was one of the pioneering educational
  • 22:02psychologists David Cope really
  • 22:04talked about the cycle of learning
  • 22:06which you see here in the middle,
  • 22:07talking about sort of the four
  • 22:09phases of education and how that
  • 22:11really consolidate's knowledge
  • 22:12on the left hand side.
  • 22:14If Doctor Evans would click once for me,
  • 22:16is the active experimentation side.
  • 22:18So that's really the part that's exciting
  • 22:20when the collector students are.
  • 22:22In that experience immersed in
  • 22:24that psychological realism of what
  • 22:26it's like to talk to a patient,
  • 22:28gather a history,
  • 22:29perform an exam,
  • 22:31and they come up with a differential
  • 22:32in a plan.
  • 22:33Live in front of their peers
  • 22:35like Doctor Joseph said,
  • 22:36and having to discuss that with the patient,
  • 22:39and that really generates a lot of
  • 22:41really good excitement and emotions
  • 22:43that we really want to consolidate.
  • 22:45So on the left hand side is the
  • 22:47concrete experience and the time for
  • 22:49them to experiment in a controlled
  • 22:50and safe way on the right hand side.
  • 22:52Is also just as important,
  • 22:54if not more important what we do
  • 22:56afterwards is we take our learner
  • 22:58groups into a safe and controlled
  • 23:00setting in a debriefing room and what
  • 23:03we do there is now we do some deep
  • 23:05dive using reflective observation
  • 23:07and also thinking conceptually
  • 23:08about how that might extract into
  • 23:10clinical practice in real life or
  • 23:12when they're in their clerkships to
  • 23:14really reflect on the experience and
  • 23:16the emotions they have and how that
  • 23:19actually will apply in real life.
  • 23:21And so if we Click to the next slide.
  • 23:24What we really want to get at are
  • 23:26things that are not necessarily
  • 23:27observable in in the day-to-day setting.
  • 23:31As you're working with your country,
  • 23:32students in the clinical realm,
  • 23:34you can really observe what they're
  • 23:36doing live and give them feedback
  • 23:37about what is actually happening,
  • 23:39but that's really what we say.
  • 23:40The tip of the iceberg.
  • 23:42What's really more important are
  • 23:43the drivers underneath that we can't
  • 23:46necessarily observe or understand,
  • 23:47though these motivations and cognitive
  • 23:49frames that drive behavior and
  • 23:51the really beautiful thing about
  • 23:53debriefing is that we get a chance
  • 23:54to sit down with small groups.
  • 23:56Of students and get into those
  • 23:58mental models and really change the
  • 24:00motivations behind their behavior so
  • 24:02that they have an understanding of
  • 24:05really deeper understanding of the
  • 24:06complexity of how they make decisions
  • 24:09and how we make decisions as faculty
  • 24:11members to help conceptualize and sort
  • 24:14of make those decisions concrete.
  • 24:16So we have a video to sort of.
  • 24:17Give an example of what debriefing
  • 24:19would look like if Doctor Evans
  • 24:21would mind pressing the next slide.
  • 24:23This is actually an example
  • 24:26of doctor teaching.
  • 24:27Students.
  • 24:30I've been work forward by the way
  • 24:32very early on and I can see like
  • 24:34like who who came up with that
  • 24:36and why did where did that come?
  • 24:41There was no who said that.
  • 24:45We know that. Like
  • 24:50collectively speaking,
  • 24:51I think we should only eat.
  • 24:54That's actually very sophisticated, right?
  • 24:58It does hypoglycemia can
  • 24:59cause someone to faint.
  • 25:01OK, so that's something university
  • 25:03department that every single
  • 25:04person that comes in and fades
  • 25:05gets that as a screening test.
  • 25:07OK, and then this is a bit jillion
  • 25:09times and I would say maybe three
  • 25:11times people have checked a finger.
  • 25:13Stick with posts without being
  • 25:15prompted Peso that was outstanding
  • 25:16that he came up with that.
  • 25:24OK, thank you Doctor Wong and Doctor Joseph.
  • 25:29The next portion I'd like
  • 25:30to talk have be presented.
  • 25:33Is that the Department of Pediatrics
  • 25:36plays a significant role in education
  • 25:38at YCMS from involvement in the
  • 25:41pre clerkship simulation program
  • 25:42to the response that we had with
  • 25:45the COVID tell simulation elective.
  • 25:47Doctor Mark Auerbach is the director
  • 25:49of pediatric simulation at YCMS.
  • 25:56Hi, thank you for the opportunity
  • 25:57to share our work in Pediatrics.
  • 25:59So I just wanted to give some experience
  • 26:02that we have with our clerkship students
  • 26:04during their pediatric rotation and
  • 26:06we've been speaking a lot about other
  • 26:08aspects of the medical school experience.
  • 26:11So while they have exposure to Pediatrics
  • 26:13in the preclinical and some of the other
  • 26:16experiences that Lee had mentioned,
  • 26:18they are able to get 8 hours of
  • 26:20simulation in the pediatric clerkship.
  • 26:22So four of those sessions are at the
  • 26:24SIM Center for students only where
  • 26:25they are in a safe environment without.
  • 26:27Residents or interprofessional staff,
  • 26:29such as nurses and then they do
  • 26:31get 4 experiences where they are
  • 26:33interprofessional over at the hospital
  • 26:35depending upon if they're rotating
  • 26:37on the floor or on the nick.
  • 26:39You or in the pic you get to participate in
  • 26:42simulation alongside residents and nurses.
  • 26:44The cases that we cover really
  • 26:46range the spectrum and we do have
  • 26:48a need and have been very fortunate
  • 26:50to be provided simulators across
  • 26:52that developmental spectrum.
  • 26:53So as pediatricians were always
  • 26:55thinking about growth and development,
  • 26:57we're fortunate to have a newborn
  • 26:58infant sized simulator so we can do
  • 27:01cases that range from congenital heart
  • 27:03disease and critically ill newborn
  • 27:04that's just delivered up through a
  • 27:06toddler sized mannequin that can
  • 27:08represent things like child abuse,
  • 27:10sepsis, anaphylaxis,
  • 27:11myocarditis and then a child sized mannequin.
  • 27:14That's about a school age child
  • 27:16that can represent some of those
  • 27:17other conditions and do things like.
  • 27:19Talking interact with the patients.
  • 27:21We're very fortunate to have a family
  • 27:23member present in joy who's a trained
  • 27:25actor and really helps to bring in many
  • 27:27of the family centered care objectives
  • 27:28that are really critical to Pediatrics.
  • 27:33So the learning objectives for
  • 27:34all of our pediatric simulations
  • 27:36do include many that doctor,
  • 27:37Evans and others mentioned.
  • 27:39So we have clinical decision making.
  • 27:41Those psycho motor skills.
  • 27:42So being able to touch and feel
  • 27:44and do procedures,
  • 27:45teamwork and communication,
  • 27:46we had a simulation this afternoon with
  • 27:48the student incident fascinating to
  • 27:50see over the course of four sessions
  • 27:52these were students that it really
  • 27:54started clerkships this block and have
  • 27:56not been in the hospital too long,
  • 27:59but to see how they've gone from,
  • 28:00you know,
  • 28:01not really understanding what a team.
  • 28:02Peter does to really starting to apply
  • 28:04some of the tenets of teamwork and
  • 28:06communication and then the family
  • 28:08centered care aspects and embedding
  • 28:09discussions with the parents that
  • 28:11involve both empathy and the importance
  • 28:14of ascertaining information from the parents.
  • 28:16Please advance a element that we
  • 28:19put in which is quite innovative in
  • 28:22the simulation world,
  • 28:24but something of vital importance
  • 28:26is enhancing the diversity,
  • 28:27equity and inclusion in the whole
  • 28:29patient aspect of our simulations.
  • 28:31So as an example, in today's case,
  • 28:33when we conducted an.
  • 28:34Asthma simulation the patient was
  • 28:36homeless and have some discussions
  • 28:38in our debriefing about not only the
  • 28:41asthma and how to manage status asthmaticus,
  • 28:44but how to integrate that patient
  • 28:45within some of the
  • 28:47support systems related to homelessness
  • 28:48and legal action in New Haven. Next slide.
  • 28:51We've also been very fortunate that the
  • 28:54Med school this past year helped us
  • 28:56to actually diversify our mannequins,
  • 28:59so we were able to purchase a
  • 29:02number of darker skin mannequins.
  • 29:04We had an adult that have been
  • 29:06purchased in the past,
  • 29:07but now have a variety of pediatric
  • 29:09mannequins that are of different skin color.
  • 29:11Obviously that's necessary,
  • 29:13but not sufficient.
  • 29:14There's still more work that
  • 29:15we have to do there,
  • 29:17but we've integrated these objectives.
  • 29:19As I mentioned,
  • 29:20homelessness dealing with uninsured,
  • 29:21dealing with racism and bias, and.
  • 29:23Having a name that is stated in the
  • 29:26wrong way and seeing how you can
  • 29:28call in or call out related to that,
  • 29:30the challenge for this and we're learning
  • 29:32as we go along is how you integrate
  • 29:34this with into the existing curriculum,
  • 29:36because obviously this is a very
  • 29:38important topic but can be really quite
  • 29:41sensitive and needs the appropriate
  • 29:43time to have the discussions and
  • 29:45we're really excited that some of
  • 29:47the leading members at the medical
  • 29:49school that are working in this
  • 29:50area have provided us really focused
  • 29:52tricks and tips and teaching points.
  • 29:54Just as we would work with a cardiologist,
  • 29:56we've worked with the DI team to get
  • 29:58some of those important teaching points.
  • 30:00Next, slide.
  • 30:02So, as was mentioned by Doctor Evans,
  • 30:04one of the things that we did do
  • 30:06during the pandemic was innovate.
  • 30:07So this is a picture of my son
  • 30:09actually overlaid and he was having a
  • 30:11seizure during one of those clerkship
  • 30:12simulations that we mentioned.
  • 30:14I mean,
  • 30:14elective simulations that we mentioned
  • 30:16where we have parents facilitators.
  • 30:18We did shift down to having only
  • 30:20three students,
  • 30:21but most of what those individuals
  • 30:23were doing was listening,
  • 30:24speaking and typing into zoom next slide.
  • 30:28And during that time we were very
  • 30:30fortunate to learn through really
  • 30:32what is a small community like
  • 30:34in many subspecialties?
  • 30:36Within simulation of an innovative
  • 30:38platform leveraging Google Slides
  • 30:40and we're able to work with our
  • 30:42technicians and our actors at the
  • 30:45SIM center to allow for doing so.
  • 30:47Looking at this slide and Lee will advance.
  • 30:50You can actually have the sick
  • 30:52patient come in as you would in a
  • 30:54real experience and using Google
  • 30:56Slides can work as a team to move
  • 30:58equipment to conduct procedures
  • 30:59in that virtual environment.
  • 31:01And then move on to debriefing
  • 31:04during the zoom session.
  • 31:05So all our students needed and they
  • 31:07were able to do this and have been
  • 31:08able to do this in different places.
  • 31:10Today we had to go back to this on
  • 31:13the fly because of the Omicron surge
  • 31:15and students really just need their laptop.
  • 31:18A Google slide room and zoom so
  • 31:20they all have that available and
  • 31:22can do this from their home or
  • 31:24wherever they're traveling.
  • 31:26And that's really the setup so they're
  • 31:28seeing their fellow students on the
  • 31:29right side in the zoom window and on the.
  • 31:31Left side seeing this virtual
  • 31:34simulation experience.
  • 31:35Next slide. So they get set up,
  • 31:38we divide them into roles just
  • 31:39like we would at the SIM center.
  • 31:41And again, this was something we're
  • 31:42pretty proud of in terms of innovation,
  • 31:44where they still were able to go
  • 31:46through running this case now,
  • 31:47instead of just seeing and typing,
  • 31:51but actually doing so,
  • 31:52we have a little example
  • 31:54of that in the next slide.
  • 31:55So they divide up into teams we've
  • 31:57come up with six rolls to try to
  • 31:59give them all something to do.
  • 32:00We've even put in this liquor
  • 32:01upper role where they're going
  • 32:02to look things up on the Internet
  • 32:04and start to talk about what is
  • 32:06a reliable source of information,
  • 32:07or perhaps a less reliable source.
  • 32:09And it's been really interesting
  • 32:10to see them struggling through
  • 32:12documentation and functioning in some
  • 32:14of those more traditional nurse roles.
  • 32:16Next slide.
  • 32:19So again, you can simultaneously
  • 32:21edit as you go through.
  • 32:22We can easily cut and paste in.
  • 32:24Our technicians have helped us with
  • 32:27this and put things like in newborn.
  • 32:29A newborn cart with a
  • 32:31newborn ventilator in there.
  • 32:32Put things like a intraosseous line
  • 32:34and take photos of that next slide.
  • 32:37And then here's a little bit
  • 32:38about what it looks like,
  • 32:40so you can press play Doctor Evans
  • 32:41and you'll see here that the students
  • 32:43at the blood pressure O2 SAT temp
  • 32:45heart rate, and I'd also like to add
  • 32:47up to move the clothes,
  • 32:49examine the patient. The middle
  • 32:51signs come up on the monitor,
  • 32:52can click on the stethoscope to hear heart
  • 32:55and lungs. Could you please don't
  • 32:57interact and do many of the
  • 32:59things that they would do during
  • 33:00a real simulation
  • 33:01center, which we're hoping to get back to. So
  • 33:04if I take a look at his face
  • 33:06and airway, what do I see?
  • 33:08If you go to Slide 4,
  • 33:10you can see a picture of what his
  • 33:12face and upper area looks like,
  • 33:14and if you press play you can hear
  • 33:15an audio of his upper airway sounds.
  • 33:18Thank you so Marley, I see a
  • 33:20little boy who is awake and alert,
  • 33:22is some obvious swelling around
  • 33:23his mouth and a rash on his cheeks.
  • 33:25This is what I hear.
  • 33:32So so as you see, there were able to
  • 33:34integrate some real patient videos,
  • 33:36and during the pandemic some of these
  • 33:38things that we've learned and using
  • 33:39some of these videos during our in
  • 33:41person simulations have actually been
  • 33:43quite powerful and quite helpful.
  • 33:44But I I think that this was really,
  • 33:47you know, a great testament to the
  • 33:49entirety of our team and innovating and
  • 33:51responding to feedback from the students
  • 33:53because the feedback from the students was,
  • 33:56we want more pediatric simulation.
  • 33:57We want more virtual simulation.
  • 33:59But is there a way to do it that
  • 34:01we can actually do more instead
  • 34:03of just looking and speaking?
  • 34:05So thank you for that opportunity
  • 34:07to share that.
  • 34:10Hey thanks mark.
  • 34:11So as I've already mentioned,
  • 34:13we've incorporated simulation into
  • 34:15the first week of medical school,
  • 34:17and now our hope is to incorporate a
  • 34:20simulation into the end of medical school.
  • 34:23So I've already been in discussions
  • 34:25with Doctor Lucy about potentially
  • 34:27incorporating a simulation
  • 34:28curriculum into the Capstone course,
  • 34:30and we'd like to offer it in the
  • 34:33spring to 4th year students that
  • 34:35have matched into clinical residency,
  • 34:37and it will be similar to a
  • 34:39boot camp type scenarios where
  • 34:41these are scenarios where the.
  • 34:43Student would be the first person called
  • 34:45to the bedside as an intern and they
  • 34:47would manage things like hyperkalemia,
  • 34:49change in mental status,
  • 34:50shortness of breath and chest pain.
  • 34:53We're hoping to actually pilot that
  • 34:55this spring in 2022 and add it to
  • 34:58our curriculum in 2023 and one of our
  • 35:00simulation fellows for next year is
  • 35:02particularly interested in this curriculum.
  • 35:07OK, now Doctor Wong and Doctor
  • 35:09Joseph are going to discuss some
  • 35:11of our research and introduce some
  • 35:13of our students scholars that have
  • 35:15participated in simulation research.
  • 35:19Thanks doctor Evans.
  • 35:20As you can imagine research and
  • 35:23scholarship is one of the core tenants
  • 35:25and missions of YCMS and tonight we
  • 35:27really wanted the chance to highlight
  • 35:29some of our students scholars.
  • 35:31We've been very proud and excited to
  • 35:33work with some really bright minds
  • 35:35and some of the best students that
  • 35:37we have at Yale School of Medicine
  • 35:39and we wanted to highlight them with
  • 35:41their experiences working with YCMS
  • 35:42in some of their ongoing projects.
  • 35:44So we'll start with Jiangsu Jiangsu started
  • 35:47with us very early right from day one,
  • 35:50is currently doing a fifth year project in
  • 35:53dermatology and has interest in dermatology,
  • 35:55but we were able to work with her earlier
  • 35:57on and she worked with a number of our
  • 36:00faculty members and number of projects.
  • 36:02John see you want to get us started about
  • 36:04your experiences doing research with
  • 36:06us? Yeah, thank
  • 36:07you for that introduction.
  • 36:08My name is Gen Z as Doctor Long mentioned
  • 36:11and I'm currently a researcher medical
  • 36:13student in my chronological 4th year.
  • 36:15I became interested in the YCMS work
  • 36:17as I wanted to become involved in
  • 36:19research that introduced sector,
  • 36:20technology, engineering,
  • 36:21and medical education during my
  • 36:23first year of medical school.
  • 36:25I first reached out and worked with
  • 36:27Doctor Mark Arbach regarding his
  • 36:29pediatric simulation studies and he
  • 36:31connected me with Doctor Melissa Joseph
  • 36:33for work and using Hexa Skin which
  • 36:36is a wearable bio suit and we use
  • 36:37that to measure biofeedback metrics
  • 36:39during resident simulation sessions to
  • 36:42determine if inoculation training has
  • 36:44an effect on physician trainee burnout.
  • 36:47As a medical student researcher and I
  • 36:49was able to participate in the trial
  • 36:51of wearable biometric shirts learned
  • 36:53about the collaboration work with
  • 36:55other labs and also the simulation
  • 36:57spaces and other schools and just
  • 37:00learn medicine and decision making.
  • 37:02From watching the residents and simulation
  • 37:04cases themselves when I conducted the
  • 37:06study day today at in the simulation space.
  • 37:09In addition to learning them,
  • 37:11these,
  • 37:12the cases themselves and learning
  • 37:14research methods they today,
  • 37:16whether it be in presenting an
  • 37:18academic meetings or learning
  • 37:19how to balance the surveys,
  • 37:21I was also given the opportunity
  • 37:22to become a coauthor in three
  • 37:25accepted and published papers
  • 37:26from the works with White EMS.
  • 37:28I want to emphasize that
  • 37:29throughout the process,
  • 37:30I felt strongly supported by
  • 37:32Doctor Joseph and other members
  • 37:34and faculty of the YC&S space who
  • 37:35treated me just like a colleague
  • 37:37and appreciated the research and
  • 37:38work I brought into this space.
  • 37:40And their mentorship and support is
  • 37:42truly the reason how we were able to get
  • 37:45abstracts and presentations accepted
  • 37:46at both the regional and national
  • 37:48academic emergency medicine meetings.
  • 37:56Thanks Jung Soo so next we are
  • 37:59going to invite August to speak.
  • 38:01August is currently one of our second
  • 38:05year medical students and has been
  • 38:07working with us very closely on HHR
  • 38:10funded study and has been a great
  • 38:14help to us and we're really excited
  • 38:17to continue working with him as he
  • 38:19just entered his clerkship years.
  • 38:21I'm going to hand it over to you I guess.
  • 38:24Thanks so much Melissa.
  • 38:25Super excited to be here.
  • 38:27Thank you all for letting me speak tonight.
  • 38:30As was mentioned I'm a
  • 38:31second year medical student.
  • 38:32Very very interested in emergency
  • 38:34medicine in the future.
  • 38:37In terms of how I came
  • 38:38to YCMS. So actually about five years
  • 38:40ago I was working as an ER tech in
  • 38:43Stamford and one day Mark Auerbach
  • 38:45brought his pediatric simulation
  • 38:47show on the road down to Stanford
  • 38:49Hospital and I thought this was
  • 38:51amazing because I'd been an EMT for
  • 38:53years at that point and I learned.
  • 38:55More about pediatric emergencies and how
  • 38:57to handle them in that one day session.
  • 39:00Then in my past years of training,
  • 39:03I thought this is fantastic.
  • 39:04I grabbed his business card and
  • 39:06five years later when I ended
  • 39:08up at Yale School of Medicine,
  • 39:09I gave him a call and here I am and it
  • 39:12was one of the best choices I've made.
  • 39:15The project I'm on now is junk.
  • 39:18You mentioned there's really exciting
  • 39:20work happening with the hexa skins and
  • 39:22the live biometrics and physicians,
  • 39:24and so we've brought that actually
  • 39:26into the emergency department and
  • 39:27so we have a working attendings and
  • 39:29residents wearing these hexa skins
  • 39:31measuring their levels of stress
  • 39:33throughout the shift and then letting
  • 39:35them go through a simulation curriculum
  • 39:37and then going through another few
  • 39:39shifts of those shirts on and seeing
  • 39:41how do their levels of stress change,
  • 39:43particularly in the context.
  • 39:45Of kovid and these rapidly
  • 39:47changing guidelines,
  • 39:48and I think we have a really exciting
  • 39:50project that kind of lets us see
  • 39:52how are we able to adapt and how is
  • 39:55simulation a really powerful tool to
  • 39:57adapting to these changing circumstances
  • 40:00that can be very, very stressful.
  • 40:03I think the mentor ship that I've
  • 40:05received at YCMS is second to none.
  • 40:07Ambrose has been working with me very,
  • 40:09very closely.
  • 40:10He has been amazing.
  • 40:11He has taught me,
  • 40:12you know,
  • 40:13the I had absolutely no idea how
  • 40:15to conduct this type of research.
  • 40:17I've also involved in the qualitative
  • 40:19research side of things.
  • 40:20I didn't even know qualitative
  • 40:22research existed before I came here
  • 40:24and with the guidance I've had from
  • 40:26him and Melissa and Doctor Evans.
  • 40:28It's just been a really fantastic experience.
  • 40:30I felt I feel like I've built my skills.
  • 40:33Now I feel like I've had some unique
  • 40:35insight into the stresses that our
  • 40:38emergency physicians experience,
  • 40:39and I think that's prepared me
  • 40:41well for clerkships,
  • 40:42and I'm just so excited to continue
  • 40:45working with them and get to that
  • 40:47point where I can take my fifth year of
  • 40:49research and work even more closely with.
  • 40:51Thanks so much.
  • 40:54Thank you so much August.
  • 40:56I promise I didn't pay him in advance.
  • 40:58This so came directly from August Spring.
  • 41:02And last but not least, Muriel,
  • 41:04if you wouldn't mind talking a little bit
  • 41:05about your experience working with us,
  • 41:07Muriel is currently a fourth year student
  • 41:09who just completed her thesis with us.
  • 41:11Looking at some of our existing
  • 41:13datasets at our central venous
  • 41:15catheter training program.
  • 41:16Take it away mural.
  • 41:18Hi everyone, happy to be here.
  • 41:22So as Doctor Wong mentioned,
  • 41:24I'm a fourth year medical student.
  • 41:25I am applying into emergency medicine
  • 41:28residency this year and I have to say that
  • 41:30I had not seen this presentation before.
  • 41:32I wrote my little thing about how
  • 41:34I became interested in simulation,
  • 41:35but the eye procession that I went through
  • 41:38in my first week at Yale Medical School.
  • 41:41I thought it was the coolest thing
  • 41:43ever and I just like from that moment.
  • 41:46Totally loved simulation and thought
  • 41:48it was such an amazing way to learn.
  • 41:50I found that I integrated.
  • 41:52Doing so well and really just gained
  • 41:55so much from my simulation session
  • 41:57so I was so excited about it.
  • 41:59And as I entered the second half of my
  • 42:02clerkship year I knew I wanted to pursue
  • 42:04emergency medicine as my clinical specialty,
  • 42:07so I was hoping to do my thesis
  • 42:09research in the area of simulation
  • 42:12and connecting medical education.
  • 42:14I got in contact with Doctor Wong,
  • 42:16who the research structure and I was very
  • 42:18shortly set up with meeting with both
  • 42:20Doctor Wong and Doctor Ray to discuss.
  • 42:23Potential projects the faculty were
  • 42:25so welcoming and thoughtful and
  • 42:27they asked me detailed questions
  • 42:29about what I was interested in,
  • 42:30what I needed to accomplish.
  • 42:32Because,
  • 42:32like Doctor Wang mentioned,
  • 42:33I did my thesis research so I had
  • 42:35certain deadlines that needed to be met.
  • 42:37Certain formalities Doctor Evans
  • 42:39and doctor Bonds came on board
  • 42:42and we decided that I would.
  • 42:44Together I was interested in
  • 42:45pursuing my thesis project,
  • 42:47centering on the central venous
  • 42:49catheter insertion training program,
  • 42:51which is a hospital wide training
  • 42:53program that the simulation.
  • 42:54Center runs for incoming residents.
  • 42:56And as Doctor Wong mentioned,
  • 42:58there was a lot of existing
  • 42:59data that had been previously
  • 43:01collected for educational purposes,
  • 43:03so it was great for my thesis project
  • 43:05because I didn't have a ton of time to
  • 43:07go through the data collection process.
  • 43:08But we wrote up an IRB to do
  • 43:11secondary data analysis of this data,
  • 43:14and we looked at the association
  • 43:16of trainee characteristics with
  • 43:18outcomes in the simulation training,
  • 43:20such as the number of like cannulation
  • 43:22attempts to insert the catheter and like
  • 43:25a global assessment rating of the trainees.
  • 43:28I'm happy to say that I have
  • 43:29successfully submitted my thesis
  • 43:31on this topic with Doctor Evans as
  • 43:32my faculty mentor and lots of help
  • 43:35throughout the process from Doctor Wong,
  • 43:37Dr Bonds and Doctor Ray.
  • 43:39I have to say that the access to
  • 43:42faculty mentorship guidance throughout
  • 43:43this process has been unparalleled
  • 43:45to anything else in my medical
  • 43:48school experience.
  • 43:49And we're also now in the process of
  • 43:51writing some of this work up for to
  • 43:54submit for peer reviewed publications.
  • 43:56So I've had a fantastic.
  • 43:58Experience with the Simcenter
  • 43:59and I'm happy to be here tonight.
  • 44:02Thank you so much Maria.
  • 44:04I have to say we really appreciate
  • 44:06the the strong recommendations
  • 44:07from our student scholars,
  • 44:09but we also feel like a lot of our
  • 44:11research could not have happened without
  • 44:12all of your support and hard work.
  • 44:14So just really a big round of
  • 44:15applause for all your students,
  • 44:17scholars and your accomplishments.
  • 44:21OK, thank you so much.
  • 44:23So we want to come up now discuss
  • 44:25our final aspect of the mission of
  • 44:28Yale Center for Medical Simulation,
  • 44:30which is outreach. And we are very
  • 44:33committed to community outreach.
  • 44:35Doctor Jay Bonds, who is the
  • 44:37director of procedural simulation,
  • 44:39runs the Yale Simulation Academy
  • 44:40for New Haven High School students.
  • 44:43So doctor bonds. She.
  • 44:46Thank you Doctor Evans,
  • 44:47so thank you all for being here and it's
  • 44:50gonna be hard to top the the students.
  • 44:53The enthusiasm that was that was terrific,
  • 44:56but I would like to take a few more
  • 44:58minutes of your time before we conclude
  • 45:00and have some questions to discuss
  • 45:02a little bit about our outreach.
  • 45:06So we run a very robust outreach program
  • 45:10for New Haven High School students.
  • 45:14Doctor Richard Doesburg,
  • 45:15who some of you probably know fairly well,
  • 45:18was the person who initially recognized
  • 45:20the potential of the new simulation center
  • 45:23as a vehicle for community outreach,
  • 45:27and he initially conceptualized it as
  • 45:29as a mentor ship program and partnered
  • 45:32with a former Yale College grad,
  • 45:35Terrance Mctague, who is a local
  • 45:38science teacher at career high school.
  • 45:41And then he reached out to me as well.
  • 45:44Our curriculum development and to try
  • 45:46to put this plan in place and so we all
  • 45:50work together and brought our first
  • 45:53class in now about seven years ago.
  • 45:56The population right now is career
  • 45:58high school,
  • 45:59which is located within walking
  • 46:02distance of the simulation center
  • 46:04and the hospital career high school.
  • 46:06For those of you who don't know,
  • 46:08is the population 91% minority?
  • 46:1370% of the population at career qualify
  • 46:16for free lunch and the percentage of
  • 46:19the student body that goes on to either
  • 46:23two or four year colleges is right above 50.
  • 46:27Percent and so we really were hoping
  • 46:31to select within this population a
  • 46:33particular sort of sub population,
  • 46:35and that was with the help of Mr Mctee,
  • 46:39as he is affectionately known
  • 46:40by his high school students,
  • 46:42he was able to help us identify some
  • 46:45of the students, not the top tier.
  • 46:48Students at the school,
  • 46:50because those students actually do
  • 46:53have several advantages that are
  • 46:55offered through other programs.
  • 46:57But we really sort of seized on that.
  • 46:59That middle tier student and really
  • 47:01wanted to give them an opportunity.
  • 47:04For this program,
  • 47:06and so that's.
  • 47:07Of the population that we've grabbed.
  • 47:10Next slide.
  • 47:14So the curriculum spans the academic year and
  • 47:18takes place in the afternoons once per week,
  • 47:22and the sessions last approximately
  • 47:24a little less than two hours.
  • 47:26About an hour and 45 minutes each session,
  • 47:29we teach a different advanced
  • 47:31medical procedure, such as direct
  • 47:33laryngoscopy video, laryngoscopy,
  • 47:35fiber optic and division suturing,
  • 47:38central venous catheter insertion,
  • 47:40lumbar punctures,
  • 47:41I mean very advanced things.
  • 47:43You know, things that.
  • 47:45That many of these high school students
  • 47:48will likely never perform again.
  • 47:50But each topic is tide in
  • 47:53with several STEM concepts.
  • 47:55So for instance,
  • 47:56when we're talking about intubating,
  • 47:58this helps us explore acid base.
  • 48:03We can talk about pressure gradients etc.
  • 48:09And so all of these.
  • 48:12Concepts are rooted in something else,
  • 48:14and this I think, makes these these
  • 48:18principles matter to the students and
  • 48:21all of a sudden there's some relevance
  • 48:23to some of these abstract concepts.
  • 48:26Next slide, please.
  • 48:31The Faculty act as mentors for the students,
  • 48:34and that's how we initially conceived
  • 48:37the program and started it.
  • 48:39A lot of these students haven't
  • 48:41thought about applying to college,
  • 48:42some that are thinking about applying
  • 48:45to college don't have any role models,
  • 48:48direct role models who have gone through
  • 48:51that experience and don't necessarily get a
  • 48:53lot of help from their guidance counselors,
  • 48:57so we've helped them with those types of.
  • 48:59Things with career advice
  • 49:02and professionalism.
  • 49:03Overtime we've incorporated peer
  • 49:05mentorship into this program,
  • 49:08and that's actually now, I think,
  • 49:09become a real strength of our program.
  • 49:12Or what we have done is graduates.
  • 49:18From a prior year or welcome to come
  • 49:20back as mentors and then essentially
  • 49:23join us as faculty to help teach
  • 49:27the new crop students and so every
  • 49:30year we hold a graduation and at
  • 49:32the end of that graduation,
  • 49:34ioffer to any of the students
  • 49:36who are interested.
  • 49:37If they would like to come back as
  • 49:39mentors and I and I get lots of interest.
  • 49:41And unfortunately I can only take so many,
  • 49:44but I do think that the pure
  • 49:46mentorship aspect of the program.
  • 49:48Has really really improved it and and
  • 49:53has improved the enthusiasm level as well
  • 49:56for for those students who undergo it.
  • 49:59And truthfully,
  • 50:00I want to say that I think mentorship is
  • 50:03really one of the backbones of this program.
  • 50:05Next slide,
  • 50:06please.
  • 50:09Beyond just the teaching
  • 50:11of these STEM concepts,
  • 50:12the interesting procedures that we perform,
  • 50:14and the mentorship that goes along with it,
  • 50:17these students are really exposed to
  • 50:19lots of diverse careers within the
  • 50:21Health Sciences and this is yet again,
  • 50:23another strength I think of our program.
  • 50:25Our goal here is not to try to
  • 50:27convince these students that they
  • 50:29should apply to medical school.
  • 50:30Some do, in fact, want to do that.
  • 50:33But along the way
  • 50:35they learn about so many other
  • 50:37career paths that have really
  • 50:40up until this point not been.
  • 50:42Open to them. And so, for instance,
  • 50:46when we we do an ultrasound curriculum
  • 50:48where they learn how to use ultrasound,
  • 50:51identify organs, etc.
  • 50:55They learn about what it takes to apply
  • 50:59to become an ultrasound technician.
  • 51:02That this is a career path that
  • 51:04doesn't need a college degree.
  • 51:06They understand they learn
  • 51:08about prehospital medicine,
  • 51:10whether it's EMT or becoming a paramedic,
  • 51:14respiratory therapy.
  • 51:15When we go through a lot of the
  • 51:18procedures that have to do with
  • 51:20airway and and so the students
  • 51:22really learn a lot and actually.
  • 51:24And in this photo,
  • 51:25you can see this is actually one of the
  • 51:29one of the students former graduated program.
  • 51:32Who is actually managing the IT while
  • 51:35another group of students is managing
  • 51:37a cardiac arrest in the other room?
  • 51:40Of course,
  • 51:41prior to managing this cardiac arrest,
  • 51:43they did learn CPR and intubation
  • 51:45skills and and then we threw
  • 51:48them in with the cardiac arrest.
  • 51:50Next slide,
  • 51:51please.
  • 51:58So over the years, we've expanded,
  • 52:01you know, in our first year. Uhm?
  • 52:03I think we had a total of 10 students,
  • 52:07but word of mouth has really helped
  • 52:10our program and now unfortunately
  • 52:12every year I run it I have to turn
  • 52:15away lots of students we fill up.
  • 52:18I take a total of 25 students a
  • 52:20year and I could easily just from
  • 52:22career high school and we take 10th
  • 52:24graders just from that alone I could.
  • 52:26I could fill up, you know, three times
  • 52:29what I do now so we have expanded,
  • 52:32and that's pretty exciting.
  • 52:34We have begun to engage younger students.
  • 52:36I may have mentioned that
  • 52:38we take 10th graders.
  • 52:39We had taken Juniors initially,
  • 52:42and then I realized after doing that for
  • 52:45a year or so that it was better to take
  • 52:48the younger students and then take those
  • 52:50graduates and bring back as faculty.
  • 52:52And again we've increased peer mentorship.
  • 52:54Next slide, please.
  • 52:57We have had some challenges,
  • 52:59COVID-19 being foremost among them.
  • 53:01This program is a really
  • 53:03truly a hands on program.
  • 53:05It's what makes it exciting.
  • 53:06It's how the students learn.
  • 53:08It's how they apply these concepts.
  • 53:10So we have been suspended during COVID,
  • 53:13unfortunately.
  • 53:16Another one of our challenges is funding.
  • 53:19Obviously we don't get any
  • 53:21direct funding for this,
  • 53:22and all of the task trainers we
  • 53:24use get beat up fairly quickly.
  • 53:27I need replacement parts.
  • 53:29And so that is another ongoing challenge.
  • 53:33And again,
  • 53:34this is a volunteer program of
  • 53:35faculty are not paid for their time.
  • 53:37We all have academic and clinical duties,
  • 53:40and this is extra to that.
  • 53:44Again, a challenge.
  • 53:44And so we try to find a like minded
  • 53:48faculty members who who see the
  • 53:50importance next slide please.
  • 53:55And I'd just like to end with the future
  • 53:58directions of where we hope this goes.
  • 53:59We've actually been lucky enough this
  • 54:02year to hire a second simulation faculty
  • 54:06simulation fellow and that fellow,
  • 54:09a native Spanish speaker,
  • 54:10is planning on focusing on outreach,
  • 54:12which I'm I'm very excited about,
  • 54:14having her join us.
  • 54:17We'd also like to have Yale
  • 54:19medical students join us as
  • 54:22mentors in a longitudinal setting.
  • 54:23I would love for them to be able to be
  • 54:26present once a week for the for the
  • 54:28duration of the school year so they
  • 54:30could actually build a relationship
  • 54:32with these high school students.
  • 54:34Additionally,
  • 54:34we have already partnered
  • 54:35with Yale Pathways to Science,
  • 54:37which has increased our exposure
  • 54:40and we think will potentially
  • 54:42allow us to expand this program
  • 54:45to other New Haven high schools.
  • 54:47I appreciate your time tonight.
  • 54:49Thank you.
  • 54:52OK, so I feel that.
  • 54:55This was a 50 minute opportunity for us too.
  • 54:59Present to you the different areas
  • 55:01and the missions of Yale Center for
  • 55:03Medical simulation to get a sense
  • 55:05of our commitment to education,
  • 55:07to research and outreach.
  • 55:08And now we'd like to take
  • 55:10the opportunity to answer any
  • 55:11questions that you might have.
  • 55:15And also I'd like to remind
  • 55:17everybody that please put your
  • 55:19questions in the chat for Doctor
  • 55:22Evans or any of the faculty or
  • 55:25students that have spoken tonight.
  • 55:28We did have some questions that
  • 55:30came in prior to the to the evening,
  • 55:32the evening, and so maybe we could ask
  • 55:34you to answer some of those while we're
  • 55:37waiting for questions in the chat.
  • 55:39So Doctor Evans,
  • 55:41one of the questions that came through,
  • 55:44which is similar to some of the points that.
  • 55:46Doctor Barnes talked about is how are these
  • 55:49activities and initiatives supported?
  • 55:53Well, as you can imagine,
  • 55:54just from what you saw the the equipment and
  • 55:58technology that we use are very expensive.
  • 56:00The simulators that I showed you
  • 56:03in the beginning during the tour,
  • 56:05each one of those simulators costs
  • 56:07about $100,000 and so we need to pray.
  • 56:10We place them probably once every five years.
  • 56:12Our financial support is
  • 56:14really through four sources.
  • 56:16We receive generous support from the central
  • 56:19administration of the medical school.
  • 56:21We are also supported by the
  • 56:23Department of Emergency Medicine.
  • 56:24We have, as you saw,
  • 56:27we have research funding.
  • 56:29We have some NIH funding to
  • 56:31support some of our work,
  • 56:33and then we also are dependent on
  • 56:36gifts from friends as well as alumni,
  • 56:40and that has also been an
  • 56:42important part of support for us.
  • 56:46Thank you, another question
  • 56:49that came in was new residents,
  • 56:51fellows new attendings and students
  • 56:53feel that the simulation training
  • 56:55that you provide for them prepares
  • 56:57them well for the real thing and
  • 56:59you might want to even throw some of
  • 57:01this to some of your panel as well.
  • 57:05I am going to pass that question on
  • 57:08to some of our junior faculty who
  • 57:10have done stimulation fellowships
  • 57:11as well as to the medical students
  • 57:13and they're they're probably the
  • 57:14best able to answer those questions.
  • 57:20I'll start off and then
  • 57:22I'll nominate a student.
  • 57:24I think I can answer this because I
  • 57:26actually did not do any simulation
  • 57:28during my emergency medicine
  • 57:30residency or medical school.
  • 57:32I I didn't go to Yale, obviously,
  • 57:35but I didn't have any,
  • 57:36and when I was a resident,
  • 57:38I really I had a lot of
  • 57:40volume and a lot of acuity,
  • 57:42but I never had the chance to sit down
  • 57:44and really dissect cases in real time
  • 57:46and have a chance to sit down and.
  • 57:48Think about things and talk
  • 57:50about alternative ways.
  • 57:51It could have been managed and really get
  • 57:54into the nitty gritty of decision making.
  • 57:57With my faculty and I think that
  • 57:59that's something that we spend all day,
  • 58:01every day doing with our residents
  • 58:04and students.
  • 58:04And that's what makes it so valuable is
  • 58:07you can really get at the decision making.
  • 58:09What are the different options
  • 58:11within standard of care,
  • 58:13how people have approached
  • 58:15this in their own experience,
  • 58:17and you can really draw on all
  • 58:19of those experiences to have
  • 58:21a really valuable discussion.
  • 58:22So that's my take and I don't
  • 58:24know if you wanna chime in on your
  • 58:26experiences that are plentiful or or
  • 58:28if I should just nominee one of our students.
  • 58:32I'd be curious if
  • 58:33any of our students would be willing to
  • 58:34talk a little bit about their experiences,
  • 58:36and then I'd be happy to add to that.
  • 58:41I think as I as I sort of mentioned,
  • 58:45the initial part of what I spoke about,
  • 58:48simulation has been hugely helpful
  • 58:50for me in terms of feeling like I was
  • 58:53prepared for my sub internships for
  • 58:55my clinical experiences going forward.
  • 58:58I think the like Doctor Joseph was
  • 59:01saying this chance to have the debrief
  • 59:04afterwards where you both here.
  • 59:06The standard of care,
  • 59:07sort of various options within that,
  • 59:09but then also you get kind of the real
  • 59:11world perspective from the faculty,
  • 59:13which sometimes you're missing
  • 59:14as a medical student,
  • 59:15things that you need to be thinking about
  • 59:17that aren't things that you're studying.
  • 59:19The textbook or boards and beyond or
  • 59:23whatever you're studying shows you,
  • 59:23and also then the direct feedback
  • 59:26was always which the faculty at
  • 59:28the YCS are always very willing to
  • 59:30provide was always super helpful.
  • 59:32You could and there's always
  • 59:35opportunities as well like after.
  • 59:36Recessions.
  • 59:37If you want more feedback like individually,
  • 59:39obviously the degree focuses on the
  • 59:41group and the teamwork and the case.
  • 59:42But if you want more feedback individually,
  • 59:45the faculty always make it clear that
  • 59:47they're happy to set up time to like.
  • 59:48Give some individual feedback or even
  • 59:51review videotapes of simulations,
  • 59:52which is really helpful.
  • 59:58Great thank you. This next question I
  • 01:00:01think may refer to the outreach Dr.
  • 01:00:05Bonds was talking about and that is
  • 01:00:08we'll participant outcomes be tracked.
  • 01:00:10See if the program helps affect
  • 01:00:13change in college applications and
  • 01:00:15potential future careers in healthcare.
  • 01:00:19Yeah, so that's a great question.
  • 01:00:21Thank you for asking it.
  • 01:00:22We we are in touch with our students.
  • 01:00:25We I don't have an active list
  • 01:00:28right now and going forward we will.
  • 01:00:30Will try to keep tabs on on everyone
  • 01:00:32and and where they have gone.
  • 01:00:34But I wouldn't be able to present
  • 01:00:36it and in sort of a formalized data
  • 01:00:39format because it has been really
  • 01:00:42those that like what I can say is that
  • 01:00:44there every year there are a number
  • 01:00:46of students who continue to stay in
  • 01:00:48touch that this is clearly hadn't.
  • 01:00:50Impact on them and I can't say as
  • 01:00:53a whole how it is difficult for
  • 01:00:56me to tell you how.
  • 01:00:59What type of change it has made
  • 01:01:00in in any one person's life.
  • 01:01:02We have tried to engage.
  • 01:01:07Some of those.
  • 01:01:09Past students,
  • 01:01:10but we've also run into difficulties
  • 01:01:13because they're minors and
  • 01:01:14have to get parental consent.
  • 01:01:16And then sometimes it's very actually.
  • 01:01:19It's very difficult often
  • 01:01:20to reach the parents,
  • 01:01:22so we we have run into
  • 01:01:23some roadblocks that way.
  • 01:01:25I would just like to add a
  • 01:01:26comment on on that question,
  • 01:01:27which is that that is part of the
  • 01:01:29reason why we are linking ourselves
  • 01:01:31with Yale pathway to science.
  • 01:01:33Because all of those students are
  • 01:01:35tracked during their entire high
  • 01:01:37school career as well as afterwards.
  • 01:01:39What they do in terms of going
  • 01:01:40to college and afterward.
  • 01:01:42So all of our students now that are
  • 01:01:43going to be enrolled in the Yell
  • 01:01:45Simulation Academy are also going to be
  • 01:01:47in the Yale pathway to science program,
  • 01:01:49so that will help us to do that.
  • 01:01:51I can just say at a personal level,
  • 01:01:54Doctor Gus Berg today was speaking
  • 01:01:55to a yell some Academy graduate.
  • 01:01:58Who is graduating from college this
  • 01:01:59year and wants to apply to PA School
  • 01:02:02so just at a very personal level.
  • 01:02:04I can tell you that it there's
  • 01:02:06evidence of significant success.
  • 01:02:09Great this next question I
  • 01:02:11think would be for Dina Lousy,
  • 01:02:13which is do students who have completed
  • 01:02:16and alternative high school such as AGV.
  • 01:02:19Can they be accepted to the Yale
  • 01:02:21School of Medicine as undergraduates,
  • 01:02:23and are there any scholarships
  • 01:02:25available for overseas students?
  • 01:02:29Thank you Mike. You know,
  • 01:02:31I think that we are always looking
  • 01:02:34at ways to increase the diversity
  • 01:02:37amongst both our undergraduates
  • 01:02:39at the Yellow College as well
  • 01:02:40as in the School of Medicine.
  • 01:02:42And so you know, we do not have a
  • 01:02:46requirement that a student has has
  • 01:02:48attended a regular high school.
  • 01:02:51I think we will get all of our
  • 01:02:54applicants holistically and are
  • 01:02:56very open to receiving applications
  • 01:02:58from from all types of students.
  • 01:03:02Great, thank you.
  • 01:03:03The next question is sometimes difficult
  • 01:03:06to answer because of modesty concerns,
  • 01:03:09but how does our center and
  • 01:03:11program compare to our peers and
  • 01:03:13how do potential students learn
  • 01:03:15about the simulation program?
  • 01:03:19Well, as I mentioned,
  • 01:03:20we definitely have the largest high
  • 01:03:23fidelity manikin program in the country,
  • 01:03:25so all of our students based on
  • 01:03:27the addition of the pre clerkship
  • 01:03:30curriculum and then the capstone
  • 01:03:31program will take care of 39 patients
  • 01:03:34at our center and that's more
  • 01:03:36than anywhere else in the country.
  • 01:03:38I think we haven't done enough
  • 01:03:40probably and I I need to find out
  • 01:03:42how to do this to to also recruit
  • 01:03:44students to participate in a
  • 01:03:46simulation elective during their last.
  • 01:03:48Year of medical school.
  • 01:03:50I don't think we we advertise that enough,
  • 01:03:52but it's another opportunity for them
  • 01:03:54to take care of a lot more patients and.
  • 01:04:00I think I I'm did I miss the
  • 01:04:01second part of the question.
  • 01:04:05Let's see and sorry you have to
  • 01:04:10go back and read it. They had it,
  • 01:04:13so how do they learn about the program?
  • 01:04:14I guess was the first part and then the
  • 01:04:18second part rather and the first part
  • 01:04:19you already answered, which is out of
  • 01:04:22the other thing is that I'm hoping
  • 01:04:24too that we can incorporate the SIM
  • 01:04:26center into the tour of students that
  • 01:04:28get accepted to Yale Medical School
  • 01:04:31and that we can actually advertise the
  • 01:04:34curriculum that they're going to be
  • 01:04:36exposed to if they choose to come to Yale.
  • 01:04:38So that's another area I've also
  • 01:04:39spoken to Doctor Lucy about that.
  • 01:04:43Great. Well, I see we're
  • 01:04:46a little bit after seven.
  • 01:04:47I really want to thank Doctor Evans
  • 01:04:49and the faculty and the students
  • 01:04:51for sharing these kind of inspiring
  • 01:04:53vignettes and telling us about the
  • 01:04:55advances in the use of simulation that
  • 01:04:58you all have pioneered for medical
  • 01:05:01education research and, importantly,
  • 01:05:02the outreach to our community at ysm.
  • 01:05:05So thank you very much for for doing
  • 01:05:08this and we hope to hear more and
  • 01:05:11have our students engaged more and
  • 01:05:13more as we proceed on. Thank you.
  • 01:05:16Have a good evening everybody.
  • 01:05:19Bye.