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<article-title><span>A63</span><br/><span>The use of simulation based education (SBE) to improve recognition and management of patients in the transition from acute to end of life care</span></article-title>
A63
The use of simulation based education (SBE) to improve recognition and management of patients in the transition from acute to end of life care

Article Type: In Practice Article History

Table of Contents

Abstract

Background and aim:

Recognizing and managing a deteriorating patient, in any setting, can be a challenging and distressing event for health care providers (HCPs). End of life care is a core component of nursing and medical education, yet historically has received minimal focus. Simulation Based Education (SBE) has been shown to be an effective tool for enhancing HCPs competence and confidence when involved with complex clinical scenarios and advocating patient-centred care [1]. The national drive to increase recognition and provision of timely, individualized end of life care is catalysing the need for multidisciplinary team education [2] [3].

Aim:

To design, deliver and modify SBE programme to enhance quality of patient care as they deteriorate. SBE will be utilized to achieve this by increasing both confidence and competence of a cohesive multidisciplinary team when involved in the care of deteriorating patients.

Activity:

Three SBE study days are held each year which are booked through an online portal. The sessions are facilitated by HCPs from intensive care, palliative medicine, and the practice development team. A handbook outlining SBE scenarios and learning objectives is distributed in advance, this pre-brief allows learners to prepare and understand the format of the day. The teaching day is structured with three clinical scenarios following a patient through different stages of their illness: initially an acute assessment and escalation, leading to consideration of individual treatment escalation plans and ultimately their end-of-life care. Learning through simulation is multifaceted through evidence-based role play, with observers as learners and collective debriefing through facilitated feedback after every scenario.

Findings:

Online feedback provided by all learners has been collated throughout the four-year course development process. Evaluations revealed three main themes; learners valued SBE in terms of replicating practice, de-briefing discussions consolidated learning and enabled learners the opportunity to understand how it will improve their practice and value was placed on multidisciplinary team learning.

Conclusion:

SBE is an effective method of enhancing the quality of individualized and coordinated care delivered to a deteriorating patient in any setting by HCPs. As an effective tool it also stands aligned with the national drive to improve recognition of patients at the end of their life with proactive advance care planning discussions and holistic care for the dying and their families.

Ethics statement:

Authors confirm that all relevant ethical standards for research conduct and dissemination have been met. The submitting author confirms that relevant ethical approval was granted, if applicable.

Brundish and Russell: A63The use of simulation based education (SBE) to improve recognition and management of patients in the transition from acute to end of life care

References

1. K.Skedsmo et al: Simulation based learning in palliative care in post graduate nursing education: a scoping review. BMC Palliative care (2023)

2. The Ambitions for Palliative and End of Life Care (2021) https://www.england.nhs.uk/eolc/ambitions/ [Accessed 26th April 2023]

3. The End-of-Life Care Strategy, (2008) https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/end-of-life-care-strategy-promoting-high-quality-care-for-adults-at-the-end-of-their-life [Accessed 26th April 2023]