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Posts Tagged ‘Medical Simulation’

California and New York IMS Workshops added in 2012

We’ve added two IMS “Simulation as a Teaching Tool” Simulation Instructor Workshops in 2012.  The first workshop will be held at the Medical Simulation Center at Loma Linda University  in Loma Linda, California from February 6-9, 2012.  A few months later the CMS Faculty will head to New York City where they’ll teach the course at the Institute for Medical Simulation and Learning (IMSAL) at the Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx.

Taught by CMS’ Harvard faculty, the Simulation as a Teaching Tool Workshop is a 4-day intensive immersion in healthcare simulation that is specifically designed for those educators seeking to develop high quality simulation programs. It covers high level elements and concepts involved in using simulation as a teaching tool.

Drawing on the disciplines of aviation, healthcare, psychology, experiential learning, and organizational behavior, participants learn how to teach clinical, behavioral, and cognitive skills through simulation. Participants explore simulator based teaching methods applicable across the healthcare education spectrum, including undergraduate and graduate medical, nursing and allied health domains.

The daily formats vary and include simulation scenarios, lectures, small and large group discussions, and practical exercises with feedback. Ample opportunities are provided for networking and sharing experiences. Attendees join a growing community of Institute graduates who are positioned as leaders in the field.

Tuition for this workshop is $4,000

To learn more about the workshop, or to apply, visit the Center for Medical Simulation (CMS) website’s IMS webpage at
http://www.harvardmedsim.org/ims/html. You can also email CMS at info@harvardmedsim.org , or call Gary Rossi, CMS’ COO at 617.768.8267

IMS LOMA LINDA FLYER 
IMS IMSAL NY FLYER

Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting Oct 11th from 5:30-7:30 PM at CMS

Join your Simulation colleagues on Tuesday October 11, from 5:30-7pm for the monthly Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting.  The meeting is being hosted by Center for Medical Simulation,  65 Landsdowne Street, Cambridge, MA 02139

 A  Conversation with John Morey PhD, senior research psychologist at Dynamics Research Corporation, Andover, MA.  The Sim Center Goes to War:  Using Civilian Simulation Centers for Army National Guard and Reserve Medical Unit Training

Dr. John Morey is the senior research psychologist at Dynamics Research Corporation, Andover, MA,  and has 33 years of experience as a practicing human factors specialist and applied psychologist. For the past twenty years Dr. Morey has been conducting research into methods to improve performance in high skill, mission-critical military and healthcare work settings. He was a member of the original development team for the MedTeams® project, a joint civilian and military program to transition lessons-learned from aviation crew resource management to health care. Most recently he has been conducting research to improve simulation training opportunities for Army National Guard and Reserve medical care providers. His earlier research involved improving individual and team performance through the use of aviation and combat vehicle full-mission simulators. Dr. Morey has led projects to improve skilled performance training programs, the design and evaluation of job performance aids, the analysis of workload, measuring the relationship between attitudes and performance, and operational improvements in visual and mechanical systems used by high-performance teams. Dr. Morey holds a PhD from the University of Georgia in experimental psychology, and has over 80 publications, presentations, and technical reports in  human factors and training development.
 
About the Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting:

BSCREM meetings provide a friendly and informal venue for simulation educators and researchers to present work-in-progress, acquaint each other with relevant ideas from other disciplines and connect with others. We meet the 2nd Tuesday of each month.

Captain Chesley ” Sully” Sullenberger visits CMS

Last Thursday CMS had the honor of hosting Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger”.  Captain Sullenberger is the pilot who safely landed US Airways flight 1549 in the Hudson River in January, 2009 saving everyone on board after his aircraft hit a flock of birds knocking out both engines after takeoff. Captain Sullenberger, who retired from US Airways after thirty years of services in March, 2010, is a recognized expert on airline safety.  He’s  served as an instructor and as the Air Line Pilots Association Safety Chairman where his safety work led to the development of the Federal Aviation Administration Advisory Circular. Captain Sullenberger was instrumental in developing and implementing the Crew Resource Management course that is used by US Airways.  Since 2007 he has run his own consulting firm, Safety Reliability Methods (SRM), Inc. which provides expert solutions to complex problems involving safety, high performance, and high reliability in the aviation industry. And, this past May he became the Aviaition and Safety Expert for CBS News. Captain Sullenberger is  interested in learning more about what can be done to improve safety in the healthcare sector and visited CMS  to see the cutting work we’re doing using simulation to help improve the quality and safety of care delivered to patients.

CMS Says Good Bye To Simulation Fellow, Dr. Guillermo Ruiz-Ortiz

For the past 4 months CMS has had the distinct pleasure of having Dr. Guillermo Ortiz-Ruiz as a visiting Simulation Fellow. Dr. Ortiz-Ruiz hails from Bogota, Columbia where he is the Director of the Critical Care Department at Hospital Santa Clara and the Director of the Postgraduate Program in Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the Universidad el Bosque.  He is an internationally recognized expert on managing sepsis in the ICU setting and has published numerous articles as well as a text on sepsis. Dr. Ortiz-Ruiz came to CMS to receive in depth training on developing a world class simulation program. While at CMS he worked on a project creating simulation scenarios that utilize sepsis bundles.  After his return to Columbia, Dr. Ortiz-Ruiz will be involved in the development of a multi-site simulation program in Bogota. 

This Thursday evening,  June 23rd, Dr. Ortiz-Ruiz will speak at the Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting on “Using Simulation to Improve the Management of Sepsis in the ICU”.  The meeting will be held at The Center for Medical Simulation, 65 Landsdowne Street, Cambridge, MA 02139 and will start at 5:30 pm.  Dr Ortiz-Ruiz will be returning to Columbia on Saturday. Everyone here at CMS will miss Guillermo and wish him great success on his new Simulation Center project.

Congratulations to IMS Alumna Cate Nicholas on her selection as the 2011 Outstanding Standardized Patient Educator of the Year

“Association of Standardized Patient Educators (ASPE) recognizes Dr. Cate Nicholas as their 2011 Outstanding Educator of the Year”

Cate Nicholas, EdD, MS, PA, Director of Operations and Director of the Standardized Patient (SP) Program for the Fletcher Allen Heath Care/University of Vermont Clinical Simulation Laboratory was named the 2011 Outstanding Standardized Patient Educator of the Year at the annual conference of the Association of Standardized Patient Educators (ASPE) held in Nashville, Tenn.  ASPE is the international organization for professionals in the field of simulated and standardized patient methodology. The ASPE Educator award is given to individuals who have made significant contributions to the field of SP education and are recognized as leaders within their own institutions, the SP community and by national and international organizations.  Cate was recognized for her capacity to convince and stimulate others to work together to further the goals of ASPE, and for her humor and sense of purpose which has helped build a strong foundation for the organization. http://www.aspeducators.org/

Cate is an alumna of CMS’ Institute for Medical Simulation Comprehensive Simulation Instructor Course (August 2010) and the Graduate Course (April 2011). Everyone here at CMS would like to congratulate Cate on her receiving this honor.

CMS’ Jeff Cooper Leads Plenary Session at the National Patient Safety Foundation Annual Congress in Washington, DC.

NPSF Congress – May 2011 

CMS’ Jeff Cooper led a stellar team of simulation experts in conducting an amazing Plenary session at the National Patient Safety Foundation annual congress on Friday, May 27 in Washington, DC.  Doug Bonacum, VP of Safety Management for Kaiser Permanente and co-chair of the NPSF meeting, did a quite memorable introduction of Jeff to the audience.  Haru Okuda led a “sim wars”-like onstage simulation with an Emergency Department team from the Washington Medical Center, Medstar Health.  The team managed the care of a patient who had chest pain while in the audience.  Robin Wootten was the patient’s simulation wife and got him up onto the onstage “Emergency Department”, where he became a mannequin, of course.  An error committed by confederate nurse Jared Kutsin led the team to have a disclosure discussion with the family, accompanied by a (confederate) patient safety officer, who was in the audience.  Paul Preston and Connie Lopez led the debriefing of the disclosure.  Jeff ended the session with an overview of the scope and purposes of simulation.  The session was a powerful learning experience about simulation and especially its use for practice in disclosing adverse events.

Introduction of Jeff Cooper, NPSF Congress – May 2011 

All of us here at CMS know how remarkable a person and leader Jeff is, so it’s great when we hear that others feel the same way.  The following is the introduction to the audience at the NPSF’s Plenary Session  given by Doug Bonacum, VP of Safety Management for Kaiser Permanente and co-chair of the meeting: (more…)

Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting at the Center for Medical Simulation on Tuesday, May 10th

Dear Simulation Colleagues:

Please join us on May 10th, Tuesday from 5:30-7  at the Center for Medical Simulation, 65 Landsdowne Street, 1st Floor, Cambridge for a conversation with Marlys Christianson, MD, PhD, University of Totonto, Roman School of Business on using simulation to study and improve diagnostic problem solving. Dr. Christianson will present: “It doesn’t feel right”: How diagnoses are updated through interaction.

Dr. Christianson will talk about the challenges clinicians face in updating and revising their diagnoses in a timely manner in order to prevent or minimize error.  Why is it so hard for clinicians to change their original understanding of a situation, even in the face of mounting evidence that their understanding is mistaken?
(more…)

Boston Simulation Research and Education Meeting Tonight at CMS 5:30-7:00 PM

Join us this evening from 5:30-7:00 PM as CMS hosts the Boston Simulation Community Research and Education Meeting at its offices at 65 Landsdowne Street, 1st Floor, Cambridge, MA 02139.

TONIGHT:

A Conversation with Helen Reiss, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, on the Neurobiology of Difficult Conversations. (more…)

CMS Adds New IMS Instructor Courses in New York City and Santander, Spain in 2011

The Center for Medical Simulation is adding three additional simulation instructor courses for 2011 in New York City, USA and Santander, Spain.

IMS – New York

January 4-7, 2011
IMSAL Jacobi Medical CenterBronx, New York
Tuition $4,000.00
For more information, and to register, click here.
Download a brochure on the IMS New York Instructor Course by clicking here.

IMS – Europe

June  6-9, 2011 (Conducted in English)
June 14-17, 2011  (Conducted simulatanteously in Spanish and English)
Hospital Virtual Valdecilla
Santander, Spain
Tuition 2.000 Euros
For more information please email Ignacio del Moral, MD, PhD, Director of the Hospital Virtual Valdecilla at idelmoral@me.com
Download a brochure on the IMS Spain Instructor Course by clicking here.

Dan Raemer to be Visiting Professor in Australia

In early September, Dan Raemer PhD, CMS’ Director of Research and Development and Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School, will spend a week as a visiting professor at the Hunter New England Skills and Simulation Centre in New Lambton, New South Wales Australia. On September 8th, Dan will be lecturing on the challenge of challenging others at ICU Grand Rounds at the  at the RNC Lecture Hall.

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