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Published in: Israel Journal of Health Policy Research 1/2017

Open Access 01-12-2017 | Original research article

What can we learn from simulation-based training to improve skills for end-of-life care? Insights from a national project in Israel

Authors: Mayer Brezis, Yael Lahat, Meir Frankel, Alan Rubinov, Davina Bohm, Matan J Cohen, Meni Koslowsky, Orit Shalomson, Charles L Sprung, Henia Perry-Mezare, Rina Yahalom, Amitai Ziv

Published in: Israel Journal of Health Policy Research | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

Background

Simulation-based training improves residents’ skills for end-of-life (EOL) care. In the field, staff providers play a significant role in handling those situations and in shaping practice by role modeling. We initiated an educational intervention to train healthcare providers for improved communication skills at EOL using simulation of sensitive encounters with patients and families.

Methods

Hospital physicians and nurses (n = 1324) attended simulation-based workshops (n = 100) in a national project to improve EOL care. We analyzed perceptions emerging from group discussions following simulations, from questionnaires before and after each workshop, and from video-recorded simulations using a validated coding system. We used the simulation setting as a novel tool for action research. We used a participatory inquiry paradigm, with repetitive cycles of exploring barriers and challenges with participants in an iterative pattern of observation, discussion and reflection – including a description of our own responses and evolution of thought as well as system effects.

Results

The themes transpiring included lack of training, knowledge and time, technology overuse, uncertainty in decision-making, poor skills for communication and teamwork. Specific scenarios demonstrated lack of experience at eliciting preferences for EOL care and at handling conflicts or dilemmas. Content analysis of simulations showed predominance of cognitive utterances - by an order of magnitude more prevalent than emotional expressions. Providers talked more than actors did and episodes of silence were rare. Workshop participants acknowledged needs to improve listening skills, attention to affect and teamwork. They felt that the simulation-based workshop is likely to ameliorate future handling of EOL situations.
We observed unanticipated consequences from our project manifested as a field study of preparedness to EOL in nursing homes, followed by a national survey on quality of care, leading to expansion of palliative care services and demand for EOL care education in various frameworks and professional areas.

Conclusions

Reflective simulation exercises show barriers and paths to improvement among staff providers. When facing EOL situations, physicians and nurses use cognitive language far more often than emotions related expressions, active listening, or presence in silence. Training a critical mass of staff providers may be valuable to induce a cultural shift in EOL care.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
The steering committee was a self-appointed team of senior internists (MB, MF, AR) who initially supervised a resident in Medicine (YL) for her six-month research project (required for her certification in Internal Medicine) and included a first set of six workshops. The mandate was as mentors for this research project (as defined by the rules of the Israeli Medical Association for those research projects done as part of board certification) and the team members worked on a voluntary basis. After the completion of this project and the positive feedbacks we received from the participants, we decided to continue to operate as the steering committee for the full project described in this MS. For the workshops designed for ICU teams, Professor Charles Sprung convened an international group of intensive care experts (mostly from Europe and from the USA) to define goals, choose relevant scenarios and review survey questionnaires.
 
2
Deliberate practice is defined as repetitive structured activity to improve performance - key to expertise. Essential components include motivation of the learner, well-defined exercises, informative feedback and evaluation. Research shows that simulation-based education with deliberate practice yields improved results.
 
3
As of August 2017, we have conducted 127 workshops for 1710 healthcare providers.
 
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Metadata
Title
What can we learn from simulation-based training to improve skills for end-of-life care? Insights from a national project in Israel
Authors
Mayer Brezis
Yael Lahat
Meir Frankel
Alan Rubinov
Davina Bohm
Matan J Cohen
Meni Koslowsky
Orit Shalomson
Charles L Sprung
Henia Perry-Mezare
Rina Yahalom
Amitai Ziv
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Israel Journal of Health Policy Research / Issue 1/2017
Electronic ISSN: 2045-4015
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13584-017-0169-9

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