4.4 Article

Using Simulation and Standardized Patients to Teach Vital Skills to Pain Medicine Fellows

Journal

PAIN MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 680-691

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/pme.12694

Keywords

Simulation; Pain Medicine; Pain Fellowship; Anesthesiology; Standardized Patients; Crucial Conversations

Funding

  1. Mayo Clinic Rochester, Mn.

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IntroductionSimulation is an evolving aspect of medical education. The role of simulation in training programs is variable, however, in technical specialties such as surgery and anesthesiology its role is quickly becoming a standard part of training programs. Pain fellowship programs must teach clinical diagnostic skills, pharmacology and pathophysiology, in addition to interventional skills to fellows with varying residency backgrounds. MethodsThe implementation of a hybrid simulation course into the pain fellowship curriculum allows for active learning as fellows experience challenging patient scenarios, stressful periprocedural events, and cases gone awry that require emergency algorithm recall and action. ConclusionThis report describes the incorporation of simulation and crucial conversations into a pain fellowship curriculum.

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