• Br J Anaesth · Oct 2024

    Review

    Educational outcomes of simulation-based training in regional anaesthesia: a scoping review.

    • Balakrishnan Ashokka, Lawrence Siu-Chun Law, Archana Areti, David Burckett-St Laurent, Roman Oliver Zuercher, Ki-Jinn Chin, and Reva Ramlogan.
    • Department of Anaesthesia, National University Health System, Singapore, Singapore. Electronic address: ashokkab@gmail.com.
    • Br J Anaesth. 2024 Oct 1.

    BackgroundStructured training in regional anaesthesia includes pretraining on simulation-based educational platforms to establish a safe and controlled learning environment before learners are provided clinical exposure in an apprenticeship model. This scoping review was designed to appraise the educational outcomes of current simulation-based educational modalities in regional anaesthesia.MethodsThis review conformed to PRISMA-ScR guidelines. Relevant articles were searched in PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and EMBASE with no date restrictions, until November 2023. Studies included randomised controlled trials, pre-post intervention, time series, case control, case series, and longitudinal studies, with no restrictions to settings, language or ethnic groups. The Kirkpatrick framework was applied for extraction of educational outcomes.ResultsWe included 28 studies, ranging from 2009 to 2023, of which 46.4% were randomised controlled trials. The majority of the target population was identified as trainees or residents (46.4%). Higher order educational outcomes that appraised translation to real clinical contexts (Kirkpatrick 3 and above) were reported in 12 studies (42.9%). Two studies demonstrated translational patient outcomes (Level 4) with reduced incidence of paraesthesia and clinical complications. The majority of studies appraised Level 3 outcomes of performance improvements in either laboratory simulation contexts (42.9%) or demonstration of clinical performance improvements in regional anaesthesia (39.3%).ConclusionsThere was significant heterogeneity in the types of simulation modalities used, teaching interventions applied, study methodologies, assessment tools, and outcome measures studied. When improvisations were made to regional anaesthesia simulation platforms (hybrid simulation), there were sustained educational improvements beyond 6 months. Newer technology-enhanced innovations such as virtual, augmented, and mixed reality simulations are evolving, with early reports of educational effectiveness.Copyright © 2024 British Journal of Anaesthesia. All rights reserved.

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