In this episode of our continuing collaboration with Advances in Simulation, Victoria takes the helm and interviews two brilliant guests about a high profile, multi-journal simultaneous publication:
Advances in SimulationRaemer, D., A. Hannenberg and A. Mullen (2018). "Simulation safety first: an imperative." Advances in Simulation 3(1): 25.
Journal of the Society for Simulation in HealthcareRaemer, D., A. Hannenberg and A. Mullen (2018). "Simulation Safety First: An Imperative." Simulation in Healthcare 13(6).
Journal of Surgical SimulationRaemer, D., A. Hannenberg and A. Mullen (2018). "Simulation Safety First: An Imperative." Journal of Surgical Simulation(5).
It is with great pleasure that we have Dan Raemer, one of the authors of the editorial ‘Simulation Safety First. An Imperative’ as guest today. Dan Raemer has had a long career in simulation and medical education spanning almost 40 years. He is a bioengineer by training and been a member of a surgery or anesthesiology department for his entire working life. Dan was the Chair of the Founding Board of Overseers for the Society for Simulation in Healthcare and was it’s first President. Now in partial retirement, Dan, along with a nurse educator, Ann Mullen, and a renowned anesthesiologist, Alex Hannenberg, all from Boston, USA have started an education-oriented foundation to promote simulation safety.
We are also lucky to have Kara Allen along to discuss. Kara is an anaesthetist who in involved with inter professional simulation, including education and systems testing. She developed the CRASH and STAR courses which now run across Australia and New Zealand, helping critical care specialists navigate career transitions and return to work after leave. This has led her to work in a number of simulation settings, from stand-alone centres to simulation facilities embedded in clinical settings.
Victoria, Dan and Kara, traverse the unintended harms from simulation and discuss the equal harms of not using simulation as a translational tool.
If this sound familiar to Simulcast listeners, it is because Vic interviewed Ann Mullen (one of the authors of this article) back in October 2017 about hers and Dan's project, Foundations for Healthcare Simulation Safety.
So read the article, think about your simulation safety and take the pledge to improve.
The Podcast Related Articleshttps://icenetblog.royalcollege.ca/2017/12/15/simulation-and-patient-safety-a-complex-relationship/
https://healthcaresimulationsafety.org/
https://soundcloud.com/medicalsimulation/episode-007-dans-journey-to-the-dark-side
86 - #HcSimWeek19 Nemat Alsaba
85 - #HcSimWeek19 Steph Barwick & Mater Education Team
84 - Book Review: Healthcare Simulation at a Glance
83 - FOAMsim and Online Learning with VCHlearn
82 - Australasian Sim Congress 2019 Preview
81 - Healthcare Simulation Week 2019
80 - Journal Club Podcast Monthly Wrap July 2019
79 - Journal Club Podcast Monthly Wrap June 2019
78 - Advances in Simulation: Transmitting Culture Through Simulation
77 - Simulcast Journal Club Podcast Monthly Wrap April 2019
76 - Advances in Simulation - Words Matter
75 - Advances in Simulation: Another Debriefing Course! Who Benefits?
74 - Simulcast Journal Club Podcast Monthly Wrap March 2019
73 - Ben & Vic at IMSH with David Grant, Amy Zheng, Jannet Lee-Jararam & Benjamin Berg
72 - Simulcast Journal Club Podcast Monthly Wrap February 2019
71 - Ben & Vic at IMSH with Ron Harden, Yue Dong and Suzie Kardong-Edgren
70 - Ben & Vic at IMSH with Bram Welch-Horan, Belinda Lowe and Michelle Kelly
69 - Journal Club Special Edition Sim & Sonography with Dr Resa E. Lewiss & Team
68 - Ben & Vic at IMSH with KT Waxman, Komal Bajaj & James Leung
67 - Simulcast Journal Club Podcast Nov/Dec 2018
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Navigating Life After 40
Teaching Learning Leading K-12
Regenerative Skills
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast