Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?

Abstract Background The healthcare needs of our societies are continual changing and evolving. In order to meet these needs, healthcare provision has to be dynamic and reactive to provide the highest standards of safe care. Therefore, there is a continual need to generate new evidence and implement...

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Main Authors: Gerard J. Gormley, Anu Kajamaa, Richard L. Conn, Sarah O’Hare
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:Advances in Simulation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41077-020-00148-8
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spelling doaj-ccf675e46b4a4832acbb1bc1fd41343e2020-11-25T03:33:35ZengBMCAdvances in Simulation2059-06282020-10-01511910.1186/s41077-020-00148-8Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?Gerard J. Gormley0Anu Kajamaa1Richard L. Conn2Sarah O’Hare3Centre for Medical Education, Queen’s University BelfastFaculty of Educational Sciences, University of HelsinkiCentre for Medical Education, Queen’s University BelfastCentre for Medical Education, Queen’s University BelfastAbstract Background The healthcare needs of our societies are continual changing and evolving. In order to meet these needs, healthcare provision has to be dynamic and reactive to provide the highest standards of safe care. Therefore, there is a continual need to generate new evidence and implement it within healthcare contexts. In recent times, in situ simulation has proven to have been an important educational modality to accelerate individuals’ and teams’ skills and adaptability to deliver care in local contexts. However, due to the increasing complexity of healthcare, including in community settings, an expanded theoretical informed view of in situ simulation is needed as a form of education that can drive organizational as well as individual learning. Main body Cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) provides us with analytical tools to recognize and analyse complex health care systems. Making visible the key elements of an in situ simulation process and their interconnections, CHAT facilitates development of a system-level view of needs of change. Conclusion In this paper, we theorize how CHAT could help guide in situ simulation processes—to generate greater insights beyond the specific simulation context and bring about meaningful transformation of an organizational activity.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41077-020-00148-8General practiceCommunity-based healthcareIn situ simulationActivity theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gerard J. Gormley
Anu Kajamaa
Richard L. Conn
Sarah O’Hare
spellingShingle Gerard J. Gormley
Anu Kajamaa
Richard L. Conn
Sarah O’Hare
Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
Advances in Simulation
General practice
Community-based healthcare
In situ simulation
Activity theory
author_facet Gerard J. Gormley
Anu Kajamaa
Richard L. Conn
Sarah O’Hare
author_sort Gerard J. Gormley
title Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
title_short Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
title_full Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
title_fullStr Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
title_full_unstemmed Making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
title_sort making the invisible visible: a place for utilizing activity theory within in situ simulation to drive healthcare organizational development?
publisher BMC
series Advances in Simulation
issn 2059-0628
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background The healthcare needs of our societies are continual changing and evolving. In order to meet these needs, healthcare provision has to be dynamic and reactive to provide the highest standards of safe care. Therefore, there is a continual need to generate new evidence and implement it within healthcare contexts. In recent times, in situ simulation has proven to have been an important educational modality to accelerate individuals’ and teams’ skills and adaptability to deliver care in local contexts. However, due to the increasing complexity of healthcare, including in community settings, an expanded theoretical informed view of in situ simulation is needed as a form of education that can drive organizational as well as individual learning. Main body Cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) provides us with analytical tools to recognize and analyse complex health care systems. Making visible the key elements of an in situ simulation process and their interconnections, CHAT facilitates development of a system-level view of needs of change. Conclusion In this paper, we theorize how CHAT could help guide in situ simulation processes—to generate greater insights beyond the specific simulation context and bring about meaningful transformation of an organizational activity.
topic General practice
Community-based healthcare
In situ simulation
Activity theory
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41077-020-00148-8
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