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Simulation in New Zealand: what have you done for me lately? New Zealand Association for Simulation in Healthcare (NZASH) white paper.
Meeks, Maggie; Peckler, Brad; Lesa, Raewyn; Wood, Trish; Bruce, Tracey; Sheedy, Michael; White, Chris; Dean, John; Armstrong, Patrick; McTavish, Arthur; Beasley, Christine; Winder, Paul.
Affiliation
  • Meeks M; Simulation Medical Lead for the Chief Medical Officer's Office, Waitaha Canterbury; NZASH Board Member.
  • Peckler B; Emergency Medicine Specialist and Clinical Lead Wellington Simulation Centre, Wellington Hospital; NZASH Chair.
  • Lesa R; Senior Lecturer and Registered Nurse, University of Otago; NZASH Board Member.
  • Wood T; Registered Nurse and Operations Manager, Douglas Starship Simulation Programme, Starship Child Health; NZASH Board Member.
  • Bruce T; Registered Nurse, Nurse Educator and Child Health Clinical Coordinator, Waitaha Canterbury; NZASH Board Member.
  • Sheedy M; Bioengineering Team Leader, Medical Physics and Bioengineering, Te Whatu Ora - Waitaha; NZASH Board Member.
  • White C; Emergency Medicine Specialist, Taranaki Base Hospital Emergency Department; NZASH Board Member.
  • Dean J; Senior Professional Practice Fellow, Department of Primary Care and Clinical Simulation, University of Otago, Christchurch Campus; former NZASH President.
  • Armstrong P; Emergency Medicine Specialist, Hutt Valley Hospital.
  • McTavish A; Registered Medical Officer, Nelson Marlborough Hospital; NZASH Board Member.
  • Beasley C; Registered Nurse, Manawa Simulation Centre Manager and Simulation Lead Waitaha Canterbury, Waitaha Canterbury.
  • Winder P; Nurse Specialist and Resuscitation and Simulation Training Officer, Southern Hospital.
N Z Med J ; 137(1591): 74-89, 2024 Mar 08.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38452235
ABSTRACT
Medical simulation has become an integral aspect of modern healthcare education and practice. It has evolved to become an essential aspect of teaching core concepts and skills, common and rare presentations, algorithms and protocols, communication, interpersonal and teamworking skills and testing new equipment and systems. Simulation-based learning (SBL) is useful for the novice to the senior clinician. Healthcare is a complex adaptive system built from very large numbers of mutually interacting subunits (e.g., different professions, departments, equipment). These subunits generate multiple repeated interactions that have the potential to result in rich, collective behaviour that feeds back into the organisation. There is a unique opportunity in New Zealand with the formation of Te Whatu Ora - Health New Zealand and Te Aka Whai Ora - Maori Health Authority and the reorganisation of the healthcare system. This viewpoint is a white paper for the integration of SBL into our healthcare system. We describe our concerns in the current system and list our current capabilities. The way SBL could be implemented in pre- and post-registration phases of practice are explored as well as the integration of communication and culture. Interprofessional education has been shown to improve outcomes and is best done with an interprofessional simulation curriculum. We describe ways that simulation is currently used in our system and describe other uses such as quality improvement, safety and systems engineering and integration. The aim of this viewpoint is to alert Te Whatu Ora and Te Aka Whai Ora of the existing infrastructure of the simulation community in New Zealand and encourage them to invest in its future.
Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Delivery of Health Care / Simulation Training Country/Region as subject: Oceania Language: En Journal: N Z Med J Year: 2024 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Delivery of Health Care / Simulation Training Country/Region as subject: Oceania Language: En Journal: N Z Med J Year: 2024 Document type: Article