The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy
Introduction: In Italy, medical simulation is undergoing a phase of intense diffusion, establishing a more decisive and uniform role in medical education. Educators receive many opportunities to train in simulation education, but these provide little room for personal growth and collaboration. This...
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doaj-572eb435b89e452987df2711de773ec02021-05-06T15:44:45ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMedical Education Online1087-29812021-01-0126110.1080/10872981.2021.19200891920089The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in ItalyFrancesco Dojmi Di Delupis0Paolo Pisanelli1Nicola Di Daniele2University of Tor VergataMisericordia HospitalUniversity of Tor VergataIntroduction: In Italy, medical simulation is undergoing a phase of intense diffusion, establishing a more decisive and uniform role in medical education. Educators receive many opportunities to train in simulation education, but these provide little room for personal growth and collaboration. This could have a negative impact on education quality and the standardization of processes. Thus, we found a gap in new information technology use, specifically in the informal diffusion of medical simulation content knowledge. Using a blog platform, we identified a space in which people can disseminate information, share their experiences, criticisms, and perspectives. Approach: From March 2016 to November 2019, we implemented a novel pilot project, creating the first Italian blog on simulations, dedicated to simulation educators. It contained the following main sections: communication, debriefing, simulation experiences, instructions for use, journal club, and psychology. Findings: Multidisciplinary personnel contributed to the blog’s content. With over 70 posts, the blog accumulated 25,615 pageviews and 9,056 sessions, without promotional, monetary support or diffusion efforts. The average visitor session was 2.17 minutes long and the average pages viewed in a session was 2.83. Additionally, 30.5% of the users were returning visitors and 58.67% found the website through Google. Insights: Despite the blog’s niche subject, the results were encouraging. The materials were not only meant for personal viewing, but also as a source for announcing public events (meetings and workshops). The project provided educators with an easy tool for continuous education. We believe that it enabled and organized the informal sharing of educational simulation content. As such, it also offered significant insights into formal program consolidation and the standardization of simulation instruction, while we wait for further local scientific literature production. For future developments, we believe that collaborations with other stakeholders, scientific societies, and ethical sponsorship could foster this project’s continuation.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2021.1920089simulationblogsocial mediadebriefingfaculty |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Francesco Dojmi Di Delupis Paolo Pisanelli Nicola Di Daniele |
spellingShingle |
Francesco Dojmi Di Delupis Paolo Pisanelli Nicola Di Daniele The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy Medical Education Online simulation blog social media debriefing faculty |
author_facet |
Francesco Dojmi Di Delupis Paolo Pisanelli Nicola Di Daniele |
author_sort |
Francesco Dojmi Di Delupis |
title |
The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy |
title_short |
The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy |
title_full |
The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy |
title_fullStr |
The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy |
title_full_unstemmed |
The medical simulation blog: A pilot project in Italy |
title_sort |
medical simulation blog: a pilot project in italy |
publisher |
Taylor & Francis Group |
series |
Medical Education Online |
issn |
1087-2981 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
Introduction: In Italy, medical simulation is undergoing a phase of intense diffusion, establishing a more decisive and uniform role in medical education. Educators receive many opportunities to train in simulation education, but these provide little room for personal growth and collaboration. This could have a negative impact on education quality and the standardization of processes. Thus, we found a gap in new information technology use, specifically in the informal diffusion of medical simulation content knowledge. Using a blog platform, we identified a space in which people can disseminate information, share their experiences, criticisms, and perspectives. Approach: From March 2016 to November 2019, we implemented a novel pilot project, creating the first Italian blog on simulations, dedicated to simulation educators. It contained the following main sections: communication, debriefing, simulation experiences, instructions for use, journal club, and psychology. Findings: Multidisciplinary personnel contributed to the blog’s content. With over 70 posts, the blog accumulated 25,615 pageviews and 9,056 sessions, without promotional, monetary support or diffusion efforts. The average visitor session was 2.17 minutes long and the average pages viewed in a session was 2.83. Additionally, 30.5% of the users were returning visitors and 58.67% found the website through Google. Insights: Despite the blog’s niche subject, the results were encouraging. The materials were not only meant for personal viewing, but also as a source for announcing public events (meetings and workshops). The project provided educators with an easy tool for continuous education. We believe that it enabled and organized the informal sharing of educational simulation content. As such, it also offered significant insights into formal program consolidation and the standardization of simulation instruction, while we wait for further local scientific literature production. For future developments, we believe that collaborations with other stakeholders, scientific societies, and ethical sponsorship could foster this project’s continuation. |
topic |
simulation blog social media debriefing faculty |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2021.1920089 |
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