Abstract
BackgroundSimulation is firmly established as a mainstay of clinical education, and extensive research has demonstrated its value. Current practice uses inanimate simulators (with a range of complexity, sophistication and cost) to address the patient ‘as body’ and trained actors or lay people (Simulated Patients) to address the patient ‘as person’. These approaches are often separate.Healthcare simulation to date has been largely for the training and assessment of clinical ‘insiders’, simulating current practices. A close coupling with the clinical world restricts access to the facilities and practices of simulation, often excluding patients, families and publics. Yet such perspectives are an essential component of clinical practice.Main bodyThis paper argues that simulation offers opportunities to move outside a clinical ‘insider’ frame and create connections with other individuals and groups. Simulation becomes a bridge between experts whose worlds do not usually intersect, inviting an exchange of insights around embodied practices—the ‘doing’ of medicine—without jeopardising the safety of actual patients.Healthcare practice and education take place within a clinical frame that often conceals parallels with other domains of expert practice. Valuable insights emerge by viewing clinical practice not only as the application of medical science but also as performance and craftsmanship.Such connections require a redefinition of simulation. Its essence is not expensive elaborate facilities. Developments such as hybrid, distributed and sequential simulation offer examples of how simulation can combine ‘patient as body’ with ‘patient as person’ at relatively low cost, democratising simulation and exerting traction beyond the clinical sphere.The essence of simulation is a purposeful design, based on an active process of selection from an originary world, abstraction of what is criterial and re-presentation in another setting for a particular purpose or audience. This may be done within traditional simulation centres, or outside in local communities, public spaces or arts and performance venues.ConclusionsSimulation has established a central role in clinical education but usually focuses on learning to do things as they are already done. Imaginatively designed, simulation offers untapped potential for deep engagement with patients, publics and experts outside medicine.
Highlights
Simulation is firmly established as a mainstay of clinical education, and extensive research has demonstrated its value
Simulation has established a central role in clinical education but usually focuses on learning to do things as they are already done
This is a good moment to push the boundaries of simulation in new directions, exploring what else it has to offer
Summary
Clinical simulation has come of age and no longer needs to make the case for its usefulness. By acknowledging the frame within which we work as clinicians, we may recognise more clearly the processes by which we select what to us is important and what is not These judgements may be at odds with how others—patients, carers or people with complementary yet different professional perspectives— see the world of medicine and its practices. This paper argues that simulation can help us think beyond our established frames, inviting us to question our practice and come up with new solutions Perhaps this wave of simulation thinking—as a mode of engagement and a means of design—will change simulation from an exclusive resource for insiders to an inclusive resource for all and reframe simulation for our twenty-first century world
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