Management of the deteriorating adult patient: does simulation-based education improve patient safety?

Jacqueline Bennion, Stephanie K Mansell
Author Information
  1. Jacqueline Bennion: Therapy Services, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
  2. Stephanie K Mansell: Therapy Services, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.

Abstract

Failure to recognise the deteriorating patient can cause severe harm and is related to preventable death. Human factors are often identified as contributing factors. Simulation-based education is used to develop clinicians' human factors skills. This article discusses the evidence concerning the efficacy of simulation-based education for improving the recognition and management of the acutely deteriorating adult patient, and the limitations of simulation-based education. Findings demonstrated simulation-based education was the most effective educational method identified for training staff in recognising unwell patients. The evidence demonstrating the impact of simulation-based education on patient outcomes was equivocal. The quality of the evidence was low grade regarding the efficacy of simulation-based education on human factors. Further research is required to confirm the efficacy of simulation-based education for human factors and patient outcomes.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Clinical Competence
Humans
Patient Safety

Word Cloud

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