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Teaching First or Teaching Last Does it matter in simulation based surgical scenarios? Benjamin Zendejas Mummert, MD David A. Cook MD, MHPE David R. Farley,

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Presentation on theme: "Teaching First or Teaching Last Does it matter in simulation based surgical scenarios? Benjamin Zendejas Mummert, MD David A. Cook MD, MHPE David R. Farley,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Teaching First or Teaching Last Does it matter in simulation based surgical scenarios? Benjamin Zendejas Mummert, MD David A. Cook MD, MHPE David R. Farley, MD Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

2 Simulation-Based Scenarios Military, Aviation, Healthcare “Safe” Rehearsal BriefingSimulated Scenario Debriefing

3 BriefingSimulated Scenario Debriefing

4 Simulated Scenario BriefingDebriefing

5 Briefing Simulated Scenario

6 Simulation-Based Scenarios When to teach? BriefingSimulated Scenario Debriefing

7 Teaching First Knowledge upfront Scenario stress Demand attention Information overload

8 Teaching Last Scenario activates prior knowledge Knowledge gap More receptive Scenario stress

9 Study Design Pre-Post Test Crossover Design Knowledge and Attitudes Instructional Modules 3 x 2 6 Sessions 3 Scenarios / Session

10 SessionsModuleScenarios 1 & 2Endocrine Surgery 1. Thyroidectomy 2. Pheochromocytoma 3. Neck Hematoma

11 SessionsModuleScenarios 1 & 2Endocrine Surgery 1. Thyroidectomy 2. Pheochromocytoma 3. Neck Hematoma 3 & 4Trauma 1. Chest Trauma 2. Pelvic Fracture 3. Head Trauma

12 SessionsModuleScenarios 1 & 2Endocrine Surgery 1. Thyroidectomy 2. Pheochromocytoma 3. Neck Hematoma 3 & 4Trauma 1. Chest Trauma 2. Pelvic Fracture 3. Head Trauma 5 & 6Team Training 1. Communication 2. Situation Awareness 3. Leadership

13 Pre-Test Scenario 1 BriefScenarioDebrief Scenario 2 & 3 Post-Test Simulated Sessions (3 hours) Teaching-First Sessions 1, 4 & 6 Teaching-Last Sessions 2, 3 & 5

14 N = 49 38 Surgical Residents 11 Med Students # Sessions Attended N 126 219 34 Total76 Study Participation Teaching-First 42 Teaching-Last 34 14 Concordant 9 Alternate

15 0 2 4 6 8 10 Pre-TestPost-Test Teaching FirstTeaching Last Knowledge 10 MCQ Test 95%CI 0.79, 2.33 Large ES 0.8 ∆ 1.56 P= NS Test Scores

16 Attitudes Figure 3: Attitude Survey Results Proportion of participants responding to each survey question and only statistically significant comparisons are shown. Where were you the most nervous?Choose the Better Learning Experience P=0.01 P=0.03 P=0.004 Where were you the most nervous?Choose the Better Learning Experience P=0.01

17 Attitudes Figure 3: Attitude Survey Results Proportion of participants responding to each survey question and only statistically significant comparisons are shown. Where were you the most nervous?Choose the Better Learning Experience P=0.01 P=0.03 P=0.004 Where were you the most nervous?Choose the Better Learning Experience P=0.01 P=0.004

18 Teaching-First Reactions

19 Teaching-Last Reactions

20 Summary Teaching-Last Stress during scenarios 10-20% Knowledge improvement “Eu-Stress”? Conceptual Frameworks Stress Activation of Prior Knowledge Cognitive Load Theory

21 Teaching-First Brief + Lecture DebriefScenario Stress Cognitive Overload Attentional Resources

22 Teaching-Last Brief Scenario Stress Activation Prior Knowledge Debrief + Lecture Knowledge Gain

23 Implications Use of Instructional Design Theory Activate Prior Knowledge Minimize Cognitive Overload

24 Future Directions How our results apply to: Other competencies - skills? Other settings – WBL? Different levels of expertise? Long-term retention?

25 Questions? mummertben@mayo.edu Thank You


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