Online Simulations Drive Innovation

Dakota Davis wails in pain as her mother sits anxiously beside her emergency room bed. Dakota is wearing sunglasses.
"The lights are just hurting my eyes so much," groans Dakota, a 17-year-old college student, to her nurse. "I can't even keep my eyes open."
The nurse crosses the room and dims the lights, reassuring Dakota, then continues her assessment. She's taken the patient鈥檚 vital signs, asked her to rate the pain of her headache, and carefully felt a rash on her chest.
Then the nurse looks up at a camera that's live streaming the scene.
"Why don't we have a huddle," she says. "You all decide what else I need to assess for."
The nurse, in fact, is Professor Velinda Chapman, who is acting out a simulation scenario for an Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing (ABSN) pediatrics class. She is in one of 海角直播鈥檚 Oakland campus simulation rooms, designed to look and feel like a hospital room. The students are watching from home via WebEx. And Dakota and her mother? They鈥檙e manikins set up in the simulation room, voiced remotely by another SMU professor.
The huddle is key
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, SMU鈥檚 simulation classes have gone virtual. And the online format has prompted Chapman to incorporate an innovative new technique into her simulations: the huddle.
In normal times, a handful of students meet in-person in the simulation room to assess and care for 鈥減atients鈥濃攖ypically either actors or manikins. The scenario lasts about 15 minutes, and at the end there鈥檚 a group discussion. These days, because only Chapman can be in the simulation room, she鈥檚 taken on the caretaker role. At certain key moments during a scenario, she calls a huddle to allow the students watching on WebEx to discuss next steps and instruct her on what to do.
鈥淚t鈥檚 reflection in action,鈥 Chapman says. 鈥淭he huddles give them periods to interact and get feedback immediately.鈥
Students take the reigns
From their homes, eight ABSN students watch the scene with Dakota unfold. When Chapman calls the huddle, it鈥檚 their turn to jump into action. The students have a sense of what may be wrong with the patient, because to start the simulation the group spent a few minutes discussing the disease meningitis with Chapman and other facilitators.
The students suggest more questions to ask the patient: When did the rash first appear? Has there been any outbreak of illness in Dakota鈥檚 dorm? Has she shared any food or drinks with anyone else?
After a few minutes of discussion, Chapman returns to her role as Dakota鈥檚 nurse and the simulation continues, with the nurse incorporating the students鈥 suggestions.
More huddles, more learning
Chapman thinks the new huddle-focused simulation training could foster better learning in some scenarios than how they鈥檝e been traditionally done鈥攚ith a group discussion at the end.
鈥淲ith multiple huddles, there are a lot of opportunities to speak and learn throughout the simulation, rather than just during the final debriefing,鈥 Chapman says.
Chapman got the idea to incorporate planned huddles from a program run by the American Hospital Association called , which is already part of SMU鈥檚 curriculum and a proven method of training people to work in teams. She plans on continuing to use the huddle method in select simulations and is already gathering data on its efficacy.
A new kind of simulation experience
For student Dominique Greene, ABSN 鈥20, it was helpful to have a new kind of simulation experience. Previously, she鈥檇 already participated in several in-person simulations.
鈥淭here were definitely times where I missed certain signs and symptoms,鈥 she says. 鈥淒uring the huddles, Velinda did a great job leading us to the answer by helping us think critically about the situation and discover what we may have missed.鈥
Indeed, the regular online huddles actually helped solidify learning in the moment, Greene says.
鈥淲e got a different perspective of care by watching someone give care, rather than actually giving care ourselves,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e were able to look at our skills and what we know in a different headspace.鈥