根据ASPIRE和SSH质量标准对拉丁美洲的模拟中心和程序进行表征。

IF 2.8 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Soledad Armijo-Rivera, Felipe Machuca-Contreras, Norma Raul, Saionara Nunes de Oliveira, Ismael Ballesteros Mendoza, Héctor Shibao Miyasato, Diego Andrés Díaz-Guio
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:拉丁美洲的临床模拟有了重要的发展;目前还没有对整个地区的模拟中心和程序进行研究。这项工作的目的是描述健康科学中基于模拟的教育的现状,确定拉丁美洲模拟中心在教学、研究和继续医学教育(CME)方面的结构,以及基于拉丁美洲中心主任模拟实践的国际标准来确定对质量的感知。方法:对拉丁美洲模拟中心的主任进行定量、描述性、横断面研究,采用人口统计问卷和Likert型调查。结果:438个模拟中心被记录在案,240名主任回答了调查,149个中心的数据在42个质量自我感知量表上是完整的回答,在与项目质量相关的进一步分析中被认为是有效的。大多数回应的中心对应于智利、巴西和墨西哥(37.5%、18.1%、12.7%)。84%的中心是大学,71%的中心是中等规模的,讲师不到10人(54%)。主任主要是女性(61.7%)、医生(50%)和护士(40%),具有临床专业(37%)、硕士学位(53%)和博士学位(13%)。75%的人完成了模拟教员课程,6%的人获得了奖学金。大多数人认为维持国际质量标准在他们的中心是相关的,主要是在反思性培训技术、道德方面和适当的学习环境方面。结论:在拉丁美洲,健康科学模拟教育在大学环境中得到了越来越多的发展,这是一个重要的学术专业化过程,旨在坚持高质量的标准,以提高临床技能、人为因素和批判性思维的培训和发展。我们建议在拉丁美洲启动认证程序,并开展研究,以客观观察为基础,而不是自我报告,衡量我们地区基于模拟的教育质量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Characterization of simulation centers and programs in Latin America according to the ASPIRE and SSH quality criteria.

Characterization of simulation centers and programs in Latin America according to the ASPIRE and SSH quality criteria.

Characterization of simulation centers and programs in Latin America according to the ASPIRE and SSH quality criteria.

Characterization of simulation centers and programs in Latin America according to the ASPIRE and SSH quality criteria.

Background: Latin American clinical simulation has had an important development; there are no studies that characterize simulation centers and programs in the entire region. The aims of this work are to characterize the current state of simulation-based education in the health sciences, to determine the structure of Latin American simulation centers in terms of teaching, research, and continuing medical education (CME), as well as to determine the perception of quality based on international standards of simulation practices for the directors of Latin American centers.

Methods: A quantitative, descriptive, cross-sectional study with a demographic questionnaire and a Likert-type survey was conducted to the directors of the simulation centers found in Latin America.

Results: Four hundred eight simulation centers were documented, the survey was answered by 240 directors, and the data from 149 were complete responses on the 42 quality self-perception scale and considered valid on further analyses related to the quality of the programs. Most of the centers that responded correspond to Chile, Brazil, and Mexico (37.5%, 18.1%, 12.7%). 84% of the centers are university-based, and 71% of the centers are medium-sized, with less than 10 instructors (54%). The directors are mostly women (61.7%), medical doctors (50%), and nurses (40%), with clinical specialization (37%), master's degree (53%), and doctorate (13%). 75% have completed a simulation instructor course, and 6% have developed a fellowship. Most consider the maintenance of international quality standards to be relevant in their centers, mainly in reflective training techniques, ethical aspects, and adequate learning environments.

Conclusions: Simulation-based education in health sciences has had an increasing development in Latin America, within a university environment, in an important academic specialization process that seeks to adhere to high-quality standards to improve training and development of clinical skills, human factors, and critical thinking. We recommend starting accreditation processes in Latin America and studies that measure the quality of simulation-based education in our region, based on objective observations more than in self-reporting.

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