In-house designed simulation courses versus society-accredited designs by international societies: A comparative analysis.

IF 1.7 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
GMS Journal for Medical Education Pub Date : 2025-06-16 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3205/zma001756
Igor Abramovich, Jakob Beilstein, Eva Kornemann, Joana Berger-Estilita, Torsten Schröder
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Simulation-based medical education is increasingly important in postgraduate training, yet the comparative merits of in-house vs. society-accredited courses are still not well understood. This study examined these two approaches in three emergency medicine domains - prehospital, pediatric, and adult - to identify their respective strengths and potential limitations.

Methods: In a retrospective analysis, 1,263 participants from 57 sessions (2019-2023) evaluated six emergency medicine courses (three society-accredited, three in-house). A 25-item Likert-scale survey assessed aspects of course content, delivery, organization, and overall recommendation, alongside demographic questions and free-text comments. Mann-Whitney U tests and Cliff's Delta were used for statistical comparisons.

Results: Society-accredited courses generally scored higher on guideline adherence, presenter competence, and practical relevance, whereas in-house formats excelled in areas like content scope and communication. Participant specialty, workplace, and training stage influenced ratings. Free-text feedback praised hands-on learning and small-group design but called for earlier material distribution, better logistics, and clearer guidelines.

Conclusions: Both in-house and society-accredited SBME courses exhibit distinct strengths. Adopting best practices from both models, may guide a hybrid approach that optimizes SBME outcomes. However, reliance on self-reported data and a lack of controls for instructor competence or teaching style limit generalizability. Future research should include a broader sample, more rigorous content analysis, longitudinal follow-up, and detailed participant experience data to enhance the depth and applicability of findings.

内部设计的模拟课程与国际社会认可的设计:比较分析。
背景:基于模拟的医学教育在研究生培训中越来越重要,但内部课程与社会认可课程的比较优点仍然没有得到很好的理解。本研究考察了这两种方法在三个急诊医学领域(院前、儿科和成人)的应用,以确定它们各自的优势和潜在的局限性。方法:回顾性分析57期(2019-2023年)1263名参与者对6门急诊医学课程(3门社会认可课程,3门内部课程)进行评估。一项25项李克特量表调查评估了课程内容、交付、组织和总体推荐等方面,以及人口统计问题和自由文本评论。采用Mann-Whitney U检验和Cliff’s Delta进行统计比较。结果:社会认可的课程通常在遵循指导方针、讲者能力和实际相关性方面得分较高,而内部形式在内容范围和沟通等方面表现出色。参与者的专业、工作场所和培训阶段影响评分。自由文本反馈赞扬了动手学习和小组设计,但呼吁更早分发材料,更好的物流和更清晰的指导方针。结论:内部和社会认可的中小企业课程都表现出明显的优势。采用两种模式的最佳实践,可以指导一种优化中小企业成果的混合方法。然而,依赖自我报告的数据和缺乏对教师能力或教学风格的控制限制了通用性。未来的研究应包括更广泛的样本,更严格的内容分析,纵向随访,详细的参与者体验数据,以增强研究结果的深度和适用性。
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
GMS Journal for Medical Education
GMS Journal for Medical Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
30
审稿时长
25 weeks
期刊介绍: GMS Journal for Medical Education (GMS J Med Educ) – formerly GMS Zeitschrift für Medizinische Ausbildung – publishes scientific articles on all aspects of undergraduate and graduate education in medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, pharmacy and other health professions. Research and review articles, project reports, short communications as well as discussion papers and comments may be submitted. There is a special focus on empirical studies which are methodologically sound and lead to results that are relevant beyond the respective institution, profession or country. Please feel free to submit qualitative as well as quantitative studies. We especially welcome submissions by students. It is the mission of GMS Journal for Medical Education to contribute to furthering scientific knowledge in the German-speaking countries as well as internationally and thus to foster the improvement of teaching and learning and to build an evidence base for undergraduate and graduate education. To this end, the journal has set up an editorial board with international experts. All manuscripts submitted are subjected to a clearly structured peer review process. All articles are published bilingually in English and German and are available with unrestricted open access. Thus, GMS Journal for Medical Education is available to a broad international readership. GMS Journal for Medical Education is published as an unrestricted open access journal with at least four issues per year. In addition, special issues on current topics in medical education research are also published. Until 2015 the journal was published under its German name GMS Zeitschrift für Medizinische Ausbildung. By changing its name to GMS Journal for Medical Education, we wish to underline our international mission.
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