click to return to home page
UR Home Pages restrict
search to
Anesthesiology Home Anes
UR Medical Center Home URMC
StrongHealth Home Strong
University of Rochester Home UR




University of Rochester
Center for Medical Simulation
(URCMS)
Evolution and Revolution

6th Annual International Meeting on Medical Simulation
January 14-17, 2006
Sheraton San Diego Hotel and Marina
San Diego, California


Medical Simulation - A Perspective
History of Simulation in the Department
Current Usage of the Medical Simulation Center
Current Usage Summary
Limitations to Usage
Increasing Utilization


Visit other Anesthesia Simulator Users and Web Pages


Simulation, which has become an integral component of training in the aviation industry, is now recognized as a valuable tool for training medical professionals and improving patient safety. Full-scale patient simulators help a wide variety of practitioners and students learn the diagnosis and management of clinical problems without risk to real patients. The University of Rochester's Department of Anesthesiology was one of the pioneers in this field, starting a medical simulation program in 1994. We hosted the first International Conference on Simulators in Medical Education in 1995.

The Rochester Center for Medical Simulation is located near the Surgical Suite at the University Medical Center, and officially opened in 1998. The core of this specially constructed facility is a computer-controlled full-body patient simulator that incorporates mathematical models of the cardiovascular and respiratory systems as well as models of human responses to drugs. The patient presents realistic vital signs and responds appropriately to clinical management. Physiological parameters and disease processes can be pre-programmed, or changed at any moment during the simulation by the operator.

The simulation room is flexible and can be configured as a fully functional and realistic operating room, intensive-care unit, emergency department, or patient room. Faculty members can control the simulator from the bedside for one-on-one teaching. During full-scale team-based simulations, instructors can also operate the simulator and video equipment from the control room, which is adjacent to the simulator room and includes a one-way observation window. There is also an adjacent debriefing room with an observation window and video monitors.

The simulator facility is used in undergraduate, graduate, and continuing medical education. Medical students encounter the simulator early in their curriculum and throughout their four-year course of study; the simulator program has been further expanded to meet the needs of the Medical School's double-helix curriculum. Residents from different departments participate in one-on-one training sessions as well as realistic crisis management exercises. Medical Center staff use the simulator to improve their skills in ventilator management, ACLS, and conscious sedation. Multidisciplinary sessions allow participants to improve their leadership, communication, and team resource management skills, which are key components needed in managing medical crises.

Currently, the simulation center is owned and operated by the Department of Anesthesiology, but its use has expanded far beyond one department. Dr. David Stern, an attending anesthesiologist, is the Director of the Center and is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the facility. Instructors who utilize the simulator in their teaching include faculty from the departments of Anesthesiology, Emergency Medicine, Surgery, Medicine, Pharmacology and Physiology, and the School of Nursing as well as staff from a number of hospital services such as Respiratory Therapy.

During 2004, a multi-disciplinary Executive Advisory Board was formed to assist the Simulation Center in developing enhanced internal and external use of the Simulator Center and use financial profits from external use to subsidize internal URMC academic and safety related programs. During the past year alone, the Department of Anesthesiology contributed over $300,000 to support programming, teaching, continued access to, and upgraded systems for, the Simulation Center for URMC and the community.

Top

Medical Simulation - A Perspective

  • Simulation technology has already demonstrated its value in medical education and in clinical and education research. It is now poised to fill a key role in medical practitioner credentialing and patient safety initiatives.
  • Medical simulation offers educational advantages as an adjunct to traditional teaching with patients. With simulation, there is no risk to patients, realistic clinical scenarios can be reproduced reliably for different trainees, and rare but serious types of medical crises can be duplicated for instruction in crisis management, allowing participants to hone their teamwork, leadership, and communication skills.
  • Although many institutions have acquired simulators over the past few years, patient safety training is most effective at the few dedicated centers (including the University of Rochester) that allow for videotaping and debriefing of team skills and clinical performance in crisis situations.
  • Although software upgrades and equipment maintenance and updates are major expenses, the faculty and skilled personnel who run the simulator are the primary long term cost for utilization of the Simulation Center.

    Top

    History of Simulation in the Department

  • 1994: Loral (METI) Human Patient Simulator was purchased
  • Original simulation group: Drs. Alice Basford, Ashwani Chhibber, Lindsey Henson, Andrew Lee, David Stern, and Barry Zimmerman
  • 1995, 1996: U of R Anesthesiology Dept. held the first International Simulation conferences in Rochester (focus on anesthesiology at first, later generalized to other medical fields)
  • 1997: Simulator Engineer hired, partnership with Siemens
  • 1998: Joint Simulation meeting with Society for Technology in Anesthesia; Opening of new UR Center for Medical Simulation; MCIC grant awarded
  • 1999: Team-based Crisis Resource Management for Medical Resuscitation ("Blue 100") Teams; Joint Simulator meeting with Society for Education in Anesthesia; Dougherty grant awarded
  • 2000: Medical center-wide use of the simulator
  • 2003: Based on programs developed with MCIC and Dougherty education grants for Patient Safety Initiatives, Blue-100 Medical Resuscitation Team training becomes formal part of Internal Medicine Resident curriculum, and OR team training becomes formal part of Anesthesiology Resident Curriculum
  • 2004: TeamBuilding exercises developed and tested with Simon School and Warner School leadership groups, as part of an exploration of potential corporate applications for medical simulation
  • 2005: School of Medicine and Dentistry plans Surgical Simulation Center to function cooperatively with the Rochester Center for Medical Simulation. Revision of resident late shift schedule will allow resumption of weekly simulation center cases.

    Top

    Current Usage of the Medical Simulation Center

  • "Blue 100" Team Crisis Training (Medicine and Anesthesiology Residents, Nurses, and Respiratory Therapists). This group training for medical and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) teams is now a standard part of the educational curriculum for medical residents.
  • Operating Room crisis training (Anesthesiology and Surgery Residents, Nurses, Technicians). Anesthesiology residents participate in at least one intensive half-day course per year.
  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) using the full simulator
  • Conscious Sedation credentialing (Nurses and Physicians from Gastroenterology, Radiology, Gynecology, and Reproductive Endocrinology)
  • Anesthesiology Department Uses:
    • Management of complex and uncommon cases
    • Difficult airway workshops
    • Credentialing of first year residents for overnight call
    • Physiology & Pharmacology demonstrations
    • Anesthesia subspecialty case training (obstetrics, pediatrics)
    • Supplementary training for residents from other specialties (Dental and Surgical specialties, Emergency Medicine) taking anesthesia rotations
    • Sessions for medical students in the Anesthesiology Interest Group (AIG)
    Users in Other Departments, URMC Groups, and the Community include:

  • Emergency Medicine resident training and research projects
  • Internal Medicine
  • Medical Students:
  • MS1: Human Structure and Function demonstrations
  • MS2: Integrated Systems, Comprehensive Assessment
  • MS3: Medicine/Surgery and Emergency Medicine Clerkships, Comprehensive Assessment
  • MS4: Seminar on Diagnosis and Treatment of Shock, Anesthesiology Rotation (Introduction to Airway Management and General Anesthesia)
  • School of Nursing students
  • Hospital Staff: Respiratory Therapists, Registered Nurses (OR, PACU)
  • Industry: Training Sessions (Siemens, Arrow, pharmaceutical firms)
  • Public and Community Projects (Congressional Staffers, Friends of Strong, Public School Students, College Students, Medical Center Board of Governors)
  • Recruitment of Medical Students and Residents
  • Legal Affairs - familiarization training in airway management
  • URMC Board of Trustees - familiarization with the benefits associated with having the Simulation Center active and available for improving patient care and safety

    Top

    Current Usage Summary (Historical Maximum Annual hours of actual simulator teaching time)

  • Anesthesia Residents
  • 150
  • Medical Students
  • 150
  • Team Training (Blue 100, OR codes)
  • 100
  • ED residents
  • 50
  • Other staff
  • 50
  • Industry, Public
  • 10
  • TOTAL:
  • ~510 hrs/year

    Top

    Limitations to Usage

  • Maximum Facility Availability: ~2,000 hrs/year
  • Actual Simulation Time is limited to ~1000 hrs/year due to extra time needed for:
  • Development and preparation of scenarios, patient charts, props, and supplies
  • Setup and breakdown of facility and associated equipment
  • Maintenance and repairs (downtime)
  • Faculty orientation and training
  • Scheduling efficiency: Staff and trainee availability
  • Faculty commitments to clinical service
  • Top

    Increasing Utilization

  • Current utilization: 45%
  • Means to increase utilization
  • Industry applications and collaborations
  • Increased availability of faculty (dependent on clinical duties and remunerative uses of the simulator that can support faculty academic time)
  • Increased availability of residents (dependent on work hours limits and time left after other educational activities)
  • Administrative support (for scheduling, procurement, and reporting)
  • Increased simulator staff: programmer/technician (1.0 FTE), secretary (.5 FTE), educator (1.0 FTE)

  • Updated! We maintain lists of Anesthesia Simulator Users and Web Pages around the world. Please notify the Webmaster if you would like your program or web page added to the list. Several new centers have been added in recent months!

    jump to Top of Page
    Anesthesiology Homepage



  • --------