Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Education
Date Submitted: Jan 22, 2020
Open Peer Review Period: Jan 22, 2020 - Jan 29, 2020
Date Accepted: Mar 23, 2020
Date Submitted to PubMed: Oct 1, 2020
(closed for review but you can still tweet)
Comparing classroom instruction to individual instruction as a teaching approach to avatar-based patient monitoring with the “Visual Patient”: an experimental study.
ABSTRACT
Background:
The Visual Patient is an avatar-based alternative to standard patient monitor displays, which significantly improves the perception of vital signs. Implementation in larger organizations would require the technology to be teachable in a brief class instruction to big groups of professionals. Therefore, our study aimed to investigate the efficacy of such a large-scale introduction of the Visual Patient.
Objective:
In this study, we aimed to compare two different educational methods, 1 on 1 individual instruction versus class instruction, for training anesthesia providers in avatar-based patient monitoring.
Methods:
In this experimental study, we presented 42 anesthesia providers with a 30-minute instruction in a class to the Visual Patient (class instruction group). We further selected a historical sample of 16 participants from a previous study, who received an individual instruction (individual instruction group). After the instruction, participants were shown monitoring with either conventional displays or Visual Patient displays and asked to interpret vital signs. In the class instruction group, the number of correct perceptions was compared between the two technologies after seeing scenarios for either 3 or 10 seconds. Then, the teaching efficacy of the class instruction was compared with the individual instruction in the historical sample by a two-way mixed ANOVA and mixed regression.
Results:
In the class instruction group, when presented with the 3 seconds scenarios there was a statistically significant median increase in perception of vital signs (3 vital signs) if participants were shown the Visual Patient compared to the conventional display, P < .0001, effect size r= -0.55. No significant difference was found in the 10 second scenarios. There was a statistically significant interaction between the teaching intervention and display technology on perceived vital signs, P = .036, partial η2 = 0.076. The mixed logistic regression model for correct vital sign perception yielded an odds ratio (OR) of 1.88 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.41 to 2.52, P < .0001) for individual instruction compared to class instruction, as well as an OR of 3.03 (95% CI 2.50 to 3.70, P < .0001) for the Visual Patient compared to conventional monitoring.
Conclusions:
Although individual instruction to the Visual Patient is slightly more effective, class instruction is a viable teaching method facilitating the feasibility of large-scale introduction of health care providers to the novel technology.
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