• Military medicine · Jan 2021

    The Advanced Modular Manikin Open Source Platform for Healthcare Simulation.

    • David Hananel, Dan Silverglate, Dan Burke, Benjamin Riggs, Jack Norfleet, and Robert M Sweet.
    • Department of Urology, University of Minnesota, MMC 394, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
    • Mil Med. 2021 Jan 25; 186 (Suppl 1): 49-57.

    IntroductionCurrent thinking in healthcare education stipulates a holistic approach with a focus on patient management, bringing together technical skills, decision-making, and team performance. In parallel, training opportunities with actual patients have diminished, and the number of different interventions to master has increased. Training on simulators has become broadly accepted; however, requirements for such training devices have outpaced the development of new simulators. The Department of Defense (DoD) targeted this gap with a development challenge. This article introduces the Advanced Modular Manikin (AMM) platform and describes the path followed to address the challenge.Materials And MethodsUnder Contract # W81XWH-14-C-0101, our interdisciplinary team of healthcare providers, educators, engineers, and scientists, together with partners in industry and the government collaborated to establish a set of comprehensive requirements and develop an overarching system architecture and specifications to meet healthcare simulation needs. In order to instantiate the architecture and investigate usability of the platform, a demonstration modular manikin was created that incorporated physical and digital peripherals.ResultsThe system architecture and corresponding data models have been completed and published as open source. A developer's tool kit has been created, including instructional materials and required hardware and software for interested parties to develop AMM-compatible modules. A reference manikin was created based on the platform specifications and successfully supported a usability study that was performed by the American College of Surgeons, Education Division at the Naval Medical Center San Diego.ConclusionsThe formal release of a functional modular, interoperable open-source healthcare simulation platform is complete. Next steps involve a strategy for maintaining the open standards and verification of AMM-compatibility for modules. Increasing awareness of this powerful tool and prioritization of module-development to address the wide range of healthcare education needs could lead to a renaissance in military and civilian healthcare simulation-based training.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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