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Donor call simulation: A novel medical education tool to evaluate trainees’ clinical decision‐making in transplant infectious disease
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Sigler, Rachel (Author)
- Wooten, Darcy (Author)
- Kumar, Rebecca N. (Author)
- Hand, Jonathan (Author)
- Marschalk, Nicholas (Author)
- Go, Roderick (Author)
- Prakash, Katya (Author)
- Stohs, Erica (Author)
- Schaenman, Joanna (Author)
- Law, Nancy (Author)
Title
Donor call simulation: A novel medical education tool to evaluate trainees’ clinical decision‐making in transplant infectious disease
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Evaluating organ suitability for transplantation based on infection risk is a core competency in transplant infectious disease (TID). It is unclear if trainees have opportunities to practice during training. We created a simulation curriculum to develop and evaluate this skill among infectious disease (ID) trainees.
Methods
We created six simulation questions about organ suitability for transplant based on infection risk. During trainees’ TID rotations, faculty texted or paged the simulation cases posing as the transplant coordinator. Trainees had 15 min to ask questions before deciding the suitability of the organ and explained their clinical reasoning in a survey. Trainees completed a post‐simulation survey to evaluate its effectiveness.
Results
ID trainees, including residents and fellows on rotation, from seven centers participated. Eighty‐seven percent (13/15) of trainees felt the simulation was effective in teaching them this concept, and 80% (12/15) felt prepared for clinical practice. The proportion of correct responses was generally high among the six different cases (43%–100%); correct responses increased for some cases in the post‐activity survey. Of the 100 clinical reasoning decisions made during the activity, 19% were discordant, where the trainee correctly identified suitable organs for incorrect reasons.
Conclusion
Our simulation was effective in teaching when to accept or reject an organ for transplant and was a valuable educational tool. By evaluating clinical reasoning for decisions our simulation provides educators with nuanced insight and allows for targeted coaching. This study demonstrates a critical need for further educational tools in TID.
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Publication
Transplant Infectious Disease
Date
11/2023
Pages
e14177
Journal Abbr
Transplant Infectious Dis
Accessed
12/6/23, 3:04 PM
ISSN
1398-2273, 1399-3062
Short Title
Donor call simulation
Language
en
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Sigler, R., Wooten, D., Kumar, R. N., Hand, J., Marschalk, N., Go, R., Prakash, K., Stohs, E., Schaenman, J., & Law, N. (2023). Donor call simulation: A novel medical education tool to evaluate trainees’ clinical decision‐making in transplant infectious disease. Transplant Infectious Disease, e14177. https://doi.org/10.1111/tid.14177
SOLID ORGANS AND MCSS
TRANSPLANT ID TRAINING
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