Maintenance of certification (MOC) is a process through which practitioners are able to show continuing competence in their areas of expertise. Simulation plays an increasingly important role in the assessment of students and residents, as well as in the initial practice certification for health care professionals. The use of simulation as an assessment tool in MOC has been sluggish to be universally accepted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Interprofessional education (IPE) in health care describes a process for training that places health care learners from different professional disciplines into an environment or situation in which shared or linked educational goals are pursued. IPE represents a new way of thinking about education as a value proposition directed at high-quality interprofessional patient care and as such is an innovative strategy endorsed in statements by the Institute of Medicine and the World Health Organization. The requirements of the American College of Surgeons-accredited Education Institutes (ACS-AEIs) for Comprehensive (Level I) accreditation state that education and training activities at the accredited institutes (simulation centers) must be multidisciplinary in nature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe type of individual most commonly employed as a surgical trainer is a Clinical Instructor, usually in the junior stages of a faculty position, who has voiced an interest in education and who joins initially with a great deal of enthusiasm. Unfortunately, the lifespan of such an individual as a surgical trainer in a simulation center is relatively limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndotracheal intubation has been proposed as a risk factor for temporomandibular joint dysfunction (TMD) in a limited number of published case reports and systematic studies. Symptoms may result from forces applied with the laryngoscope, or manually in an attempt to complete the intubation, and may be related to the duration in which temporomandibular joint (TMJ) structures are stressed. The objective of this study was to examine risk factors for TMD complaints associated with endotracheal intubation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhat have we learned so far from the Closed Claims database? For the most part, analysis of the claims made supports the generally held beliefs about the medico-legal risk of obstetrical anesthesia. However, the obstetric files do reveal a risk profile that differs significantly from the nonobstetric files. One of the most surprising observations was the large proportion of relatively "minor" injuries in the obstetric files in contrast to the nonobstetric files.
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