Issue date: 2/11/08 Section: News
Blood and bones, in theory and practice
Emily Garrett
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Fortunately, although their patient "died" that afternoon, there was no family to inform - it was all just a simulation.
Medical students at Penn's School of Medicine are using advanced simulation technology to practice procedures before trying them on patients, and there are plans to expand the use of simulation this summer.
The School of Medicine is developing the state-of-the-art Measey Simulation Suite, which will open in June, equipped with an array of simulation mannequins used to train medical students, staff, and eventually, the public.
The "sim man" currently used at the Medical School - aptly named Ben - talks, breathes, bleeds, has a pulse and dies depending on the actions of the students and the severity of his condition.
Ben's voice is that of a doctor observing the students from behind a two-way mirror, and the gushing "blood" isn't real. But though the patient can be resurrected, students get a chance to complete all the tasks by themselves, in real time.
"This gives the students an opportunity to perform procedures that would be life threatening to do for the first time on a real patient," said Neal Gauger, a simulation specialist at HUP. "Now they can practice a procedure 100 times before they actually do it."
For further improvement, the students are videotaped and can see their performances after the simulation.
Simulation as a tool for medical education is becoming widespread, as most medical schools employ the technology in some form. But the Measey Suite will be vastly larger, equipped with mannequins with the ability to simulate procedures as complicated as laparoscopic surgeries.
2008 Woodie Awards


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