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Transforming Professional Identity in Simulation Debriefing

Ranjev Kainth, Gabriel Reedy

2023Simulation in Healthcare The Journal of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Statement: There continues to be a lack of detailed understanding of how debriefing works and how it enables learning. To further our understanding and simultaneously illuminate current knowledge, a metaethnographic qualitative synthesis was undertaken to address the research question: how are interactions in simulation debriefing related to participant learning? Ten databases were searched (up to November 2020) and 17 articles were selected for inclusion. Initial interpretive synthesis generated 37 new concepts that were further synthesized to produce a new theoretical framework. At the heart of the framework is a concept of reflective work , where participants and faculty recontextualize the simulation experience bidirectionally with clinical reality: a process that facilitates sensemaking. This occurs in a learning milieu where activities such as storytelling, performance evaluation, perspective sharing, agenda setting, and video use are undertaken. The outcome is conceptualization of new future roles, clinical competence, and professional language development-a process of transforming professional identity.

Topics & Concepts

DebriefingSensemakingConceptualizationPsychologyStorytellingIdentity (music)Qualitative researchCompetence (human resources)Engineering ethicsMedical educationKnowledge managementNarrativeComputer scienceSociologySocial psychologyMedicineEngineeringSocial scienceAcousticsPhysicsLinguisticsPhilosophyArtificial intelligenceSimulation-Based Education in HealthcareInterprofessional Education and CollaborationInnovations in Medical Education
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