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'Night Shift': A Task Simulation to Improve On-Call Prioritisation, Self-Management, Communication, and Route Planning Skills

Larkin, Chris, Valand, Reena, Syrysko, Paul, Harris, Roy, Shaw, Dominick, Brown, Michael, Pinchin, James, Benning, Kelly, Sharples, Sarah and Blakey, John (2014) ''Night Shift': A Task Simulation to Improve On-Call Prioritisation, Self-Management, Communication, and Route Planning Skills' in Interactive Technologies and Games (iTAG), 2014 International Conference, Nottingham, 16-17 October , 2014.

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Official URL: 10.1109/iTAG.2014.11

Abstract

75% of the year is outside of the traditional working hours of 9am to 5pm, Monday to Friday. During this "out-of-hours" work, small teams of junior doctors in hospitals face significant challenges yet lack support. There is therefore an increased likelihood of adverse incidents during out-of-hours periods, and doctors report being particularly ill-prepared for non-technical aspects of the role such as task prioritization. We developed a task simulation similar to a serious video game to assist the training of junior doctors in non-technical skills during out-of-hours work. We undertook a small-scale pilot randomised trial of the intervention amongst junior doctors in their first weeks of work at a large teaching hospital in the UK. We obtained excellent data on actual on-call activity from existing task flow systems. Participants in the intervention group completed their non-urgent tasks significantly faster than those in the control group. There was no difference in the time taken to complete urgent tasks between the control and intervention groups. There is a need for training in non-technical skills for junior doctors. Simulations could have a key role to play in this and related training areas. This study shows the potential of newer technologies to record outcomes relating to staff activity and illustrated the large multidisciplinary team required to undertake such an endeavour. Opportunities for further development have been identified around adapting the task simulation into other hospital environments, and increasing the simulation complexity to develop other non-technical and technical skills within users.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Corporate Authors: The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Subjects: W General Medicine. Health Professions > W 83 Telemedicine (General)
W General Medicine. Health Professions > W 82 Biomedical technology (General)
W General Medicine. Health Professions > Health Services. Patients and Patient Advocacy > W 84 Health services. Delivery of health care
W General Medicine. Health Professions > Professional practice > W88 Administrative work. Teaching. Research
WX Hospitals and Other Health Facilities > Hospital Administration > WX 162 Point-of-care. Patient care planning.
Faculty: Department: Clinical Sciences & International Health > Clinical Sciences Department
Digital Object Identifer (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1109/iTAG.2014.11
Related URLs:
Depositing User: Lynn Roberts-Maloney
Date Deposited: 15 Jun 2015 10:52
Last Modified: 23 May 2022 10:47
URI: https://archive.lstmed.ac.uk/id/eprint/5206

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