Publications by authors named "Jan Joost Rethans"

Introduction: Simulated patients (SPs) play an instrumental role in teaching communication skills and enhancing learning outcomes. Prior research mostly focused on the SP's contribution to students' learning outcomes by providing feedback afterwards. A detailed understanding of the contribution of the SP during SP-student encounters is currently lacking although the majority of the interaction between SPs and students occurs during the SP-student encounter.

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Introduction: In simulation, students often observe their peers perform a task. It is still unclear how different types of instructional guidance can turn the observational phase into an active learning experience for novices. This mixed-method study aims to understand similarities and differences between use of collaboration scripts and checklists by observers in terms of cognitive load and perception of learning.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explored how the complexity of tasks and environments in simulations affects novice learners' performance and cognitive load.
  • Second-year pharmacy students were assigned to one of four simulation conditions that varied in task and environment complexity, and their performance and cognitive loads were assessed.
  • Results showed that while performance was generally high across conditions, task complexity impacted intrinsic cognitive load, while extraneous cognitive load did not show significant effects.
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  • Recent changes in psychiatric education limit direct patient interaction for medical students, but simulation-based learning can help bridge this gap.
  • The study involved 81 students participating in simulations, with in-depth interviews conducted to analyze their learning experiences.
  • Key findings revealed themes around understanding psychiatric concepts, incorporating personal insights into learning, and enhancing practical skills, highlighting the importance of realistic simulations to build student confidence and challenge biases towards mental health issues.
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Introduction: Communication training with simulated patients (SPs) is widely accepted as a valuable and effective means of teaching communication skills. However, it is unclear which elements within SP-student encounters make these learning experiences meaningful. This study focuses on the SP's role during meaningful learning of the student by giving an in-depth understanding of the contribution of the SP from a student perspective.

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Background: Residents may learn how to perform advance care planning (ACP) through informal curriculum. Task-based instructional designs and recent international consensus statements for ACP provide opportunities to explicitly train residents, but residents' needs are poorly understood.

Objective: We assessed residents' training needs in ACP at the Geneva University Hospitals in Geneva, Switzerland.

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Aims: Mental disorders constitute one of the main causes of disease and disability worldwide. While nurses are often at the frontline of mental health care, they have limited access to dedicated psychiatric training opportunities. Simulation training may foster the development of the appropriate competencies required when supporting people with mental disorders.

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  • The study investigates the use of simulated and standardized patients (SPs) in healthcare communication training, as there was a lack of comprehensive literature on the different working formats of SPs.
  • Members of a medical education group conducted a survey and held a workshop in Belgium and The Netherlands to gather information on the various SP formats being used in curricula.
  • They identified 15 different SP working formats, with six being previously documented, and concluded that the choice of format depends on the learning objectives of the training session and the expertise available.
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Despite recognised benefits of Simulation-Based Education (SBE) in healthcare, specific adaptations required within psychiatry have slowed its adoption. This article aims to discuss conceptual and practical features of SBE in psychiatry that may support or limit its development, so as to encourage clinicians and educators to consider the implementation of SBE in their practice. SBE took off with the aviation industry and has been steadily adopted in clinical education, alongside role play and patient educators, across many medical specialities.

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Background: Assessment of emergent, rare or complex medical conditions in Endocrinology and Metabolism (E&M) is an integral component of training. However, data is lacking on how this could be best achieved. The purpose of this study was to develop and administer an Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) for E&M residents, and to gather validity evidence for its use.

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A pandemic has sent the world into chaos. It has not only upended our lives; hundreds of thousands of lives have already been tragically lost. The global crisis has been disruptive, even a threat, to healthcare simulation, affecting all aspects of operations from education to employment.

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Background: Several publications on research into eHealth demonstrate promising results. Prior researchers indicated that the current generation of doctors is not trained to take advantage of eHealth in clinical practice. Therefore, training and education for everyone using eHealth are key factors to its successful implementation.

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Objectives: To explore resident learning in the context of emergency situations. The guiding research questions were: How do residents learn in emergency situations? What factors facilitate or hinder their learning?

Design: A qualitative approach was used in order to understand the different perspectives of participants and explore the context of emergency situations. Aware of the complex sociocultural interactions in emergency situations, we used the methodology of constructivist grounded theory.

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Context: Most medical doctors are likely to work with patients experiencing mental health conditions. However, educational opportunities for medical doctors to achieve professional development in the field of psychiatry are often limited. Simulation training in psychiatry may be a useful tool to foster this development.

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Purpose: Workplace-learning literature has focused on doing, but clinical practice also involves talking. Clinicians talk not only with patients but also about patients with other health professionals, frequently by telephone. The authors examined how the underexplored activity of work-related telephone talk influences physicians' clinical education.

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Context: Simulated clinical immersion (SCI), in which clinical situations are simulated in a realistic environment, safely and gradually exposes novices to complex problems. Given their limited experience, undergraduate students can potentially be quite overwhelmed by SCI learning tasks, which may result in misleading learning outcomes. Although task complexity should be adapted to the learner's level of expertise, many factors, both intrinsic and extraneous to the learning task, can influence perceived task complexity and its impact on cognitive processes.

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Introduction: Creativity and improvisation are recognized as important aspects of training expertise in domains such as business and the arts, yet rarely discussed in medical education. This article examines how creativity and improvisation play out in the ways teachers give 'expressive instructions' to medical students when teaching physical skills.

Methods: Ethnographic fieldwork was conducted in a medical school in Maastricht, the Netherlands, with first, second and third year students learning physical examination skills.

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Article Synopsis
  • Junior doctors lack training in professional telephone communication, which is crucial for their clinical education.
  • The study aimed to identify educational needs for telephone communication and develop a simulation-based intervention through interviews with doctors-in-training.
  • Key findings suggest incorporating explicit teaching and real-time feedback during simulations, as well as recognizing informal questions as a form of feedback to enhance learning experiences for junior doctors.
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Introduction: The use of standardized patients (SPs) in health care education has grown in the last 50 years. In addition, the requirements for SPs have increased steadily, and thus, the work of SPs has become more difficult and demanding. It has been claimed that SP programs are highly contextualized, having emerged from local, institutional, professional, and national conditions, but their effects on SPs have not been investigated.

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Introduction: Simulation training has been used to teach clinical skills to health profession trainees. Stress and/or anxiety occur in high-acuity scenarios in the clinical environment, and affect clinician performance and patient outcomes. To date, strategies that have been used in conjunction with simulation training for healthcare professionals that address stress management are limited.

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Background: Mental rehearsal is a form of mental training that has been used by physicians and nurses to improve performance of clinical skills, and as a vital component of stress management training. To help novice nurses deal with often stressful clinical events that require the processing of information essential to patient management, a mental rehearsal strategy was developed and implemented in a Year 3 nursing simulation program. Inherent to mental rehearsal is imagery, which facilitates cognitive and affective modification, and reduction of extraneous cognitive load.

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Background: The use of standardized patients in deteriorating patient simulations adds realism that can be valuable for preparing nurse trainees for stress and enhancing their performance during actual patient deterioration. Emotional engagement resulting from increased fidelity can provide additional stress for student nurses with limited exposure to real patients. To determine the presence of increased stress with the standardized patient modality, this study compared the use of standardized patients (SP) with the use of high-fidelity simulators (HFS) during deteriorating patient simulations.

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General practitioners (GPs) are increasingly called upon to identify patients at risk for hereditary cancers, and their genetic competencies need to be enhanced. This article gives an overview of a research project on how to build effective educational modules on genetics, assessed by randomized controlled trials (RCTs), reflecting the prioritized educational needs of primary care physicians. It also reports on an ongoing study to investigate long-term increase in genetic consultation skills (1-year follow-up) and interest in and satisfaction with a supportive website on genetics among GPs.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on how training standardized patients (SPs) with video influences their accuracy in performing roles during high-stakes objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs).
  • - Three groups of SPs were trained using different types of video (role-modeling, performance-feedback, or a mix), while a control group had no video training, and their portrayals were evaluated by blinded faculty.
  • - Results revealed that SPs trained with video performed significantly better in role accuracy than those without video, indicating that video training is beneficial, irrespective of the specific type used.
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