Leaders' experiences of embedding a simulation-based education programme in a teaching hospital: an interview study informed by normalisation process theory.

IF 2.8 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Rebecca A Szabo, Elizabeth Molloy, Kara J Allen, Jillian Francis, David Story
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Abstract

There is limited research on the experiences of people in working to embed, integrate and sustain simulation programmes. This interview-based study explored leaders' experiences of normalising a simulation-based education programme in a teaching hospital. Fourteen known simulation leaders across Australia and North America were interviewed. Semi-structured interviews were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis sensitised by normalisation process theory, an implementation science theory which defines 'normal' as something being embedded, integrated and sustained. We used a combined social and experiential constructivist approach. Four themes were generated from the data: (1) Leadership, (2) business startup mindset, (3) poor understanding of simulation undermines normalisation and (4) tension of competing objectives. These themes were interlinked and represented how leaders experienced the process of normalising simulation. There was a focus on the relationships that influence decision-making of simulation leaders and organisational buy-in, such that what started as a discrete programme becomes part of normal hospital operations. The discourse of 'survival' was strong, and this indicated that simulation being normal or embedded and sustained was still more a goal than a reality. The concept of being like a 'business startup' was regarded as significant as was the feature of leadership and how simulation leaders influenced organisational change. Participants spoke of trying to normalise simulation for patient safety, but there was also a strong sense that they needed to be agile and innovative and that this status is implied when simulation is not yet 'normal'. Leadership, change management and entrepreneurship in addition to implementation science may all contribute towards understanding how to embed, integrate and sustain simulation in teaching hospitals without losing responsiveness. Further research on how all stakeholders view simulation as a normal part of a teaching hospital is warranted, including simulation participants, quality and safety teams and hospital executives. This study has highlighted that a shared understanding of the purpose and breadth of simulation is a prerequisite for embedding and sustaining simulation. An approach of marketing simulation beyond simulation-based education as a patient safety and systems improvement mindset, not just a technique nor technology, may assist towards simulation being sustainably embedded within teaching hospitals.

在教学医院嵌入模拟教育计划的领导者经验:以正常化过程理论为基础的访谈研究。
关于人们在嵌入、整合和维持模拟项目方面的工作经验的研究十分有限。这项以访谈为基础的研究探讨了领导者在教学医院中将模拟教育项目常态化的经验。研究人员对澳大利亚和北美的 14 位知名模拟领导者进行了访谈。我们利用正常化过程理论(一种实施科学理论,将 "正常 "定义为嵌入、整合和持续的事物)的反思性主题分析法,对半结构式访谈进行了分析。我们采用了社会建构主义和经验建构主义相结合的方法。从数据中产生了四个主题:(1) 领导力,(2) 创业心态,(3) 对模拟的不充分理解破坏了正常化,(4) 相互竞争的目标之间的紧张关系。这些主题相互关联,代表了领导者是如何经历模拟常态化过程的。重点是影响模拟领导决策和组织认同的关系,从而使最初的独立项目成为医院正常运营的一部分。关于 "生存 "的论述很强烈,这表明模拟成为常态或嵌入并持续下去仍然是一个目标而非现实。就像 "企业初创 "一样的概念被认为是重要的,领导力和模拟领导者如何影响组织变革也是重要的。学员们谈到,为了患者安全,他们努力使模拟教学常态化,但他们也强烈地意识到,他们需要敏捷和创新,当模拟教学尚未 "常态化 "时,这种地位就已隐含其中。除了实施科学之外,领导力、变革管理和创业精神都有助于理解如何在教学医院中嵌入、整合和维持模拟教学,同时又不丧失反应能力。有必要进一步研究所有利益相关者,包括模拟参与者、质量与安全团队和医院高管,如何将模拟视为教学医院的正常组成部分。这项研究强调,对模拟教学的目的和广度达成共识是嵌入和维持模拟教学的先决条件。将模拟教学作为一种患者安全和系统改进的思维方式,而不仅仅是一种技术,这种超越模拟教学的营销方法可能有助于模拟教学在教学医院中的可持续发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
12 weeks
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