A Systematic Review of Simulation in Burn Care: Education, Assessment, and Management.
Tayla MoshalDevon O'BrianIdean RoohaniChristian JimenezKatelyn KondraZachary J CollierJoseph N CareyHaig A YenikomshianJustin T GillenwaterPublished in: Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association (2024)
Assessment and management of burns require nuanced, timely interventions in high-stake settings, creating challenges for trainees. Simulation-based education has become increasingly popular in surgical and nonsurgical subspecialties to supplement training without compromising patient safety. This study aimed to systematically review the literature on existing burn management-related simulations. A systematic review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Articles describing burn-specific surgical and nonsurgical simulation models were included. The model type, study description, simulated skills, assessment methods, fidelity, cost, and outcomes were collected. Of 3,472 articles, 31 met inclusion criteria. The majority of simulations were high-fidelity (n=17, 54.8%). Most were immersive (n=17, 54.8%) and used synthetic benchtop models (n=13, 41.9%), whereas none were augmented/virtual reality. Simulations of acute and early surgical intervention techniques (n=16, 51.6%) and burn wound assessments (n=15, 48.4%) were the most common, whereas burn reconstruction was the least common (n=3, 9.7%). Technical skills were taught more often (n=29, 93.5%) than non-technical skills (n=15, 48.4%). Subjective assessments (n=18, 58.1%) were used more often than objective assessments (n=23, 74.2%). Of the studies that reported costs, 91.7% (n=11) reported low costs. This review identified the need to expand burn simulator options, especially for burn reconstruction, and highlighted the paucity of animal, cadavers, and augmented/virtual reality models. Developing validated, accessible burn simulations to supplement training may improve education, patient safety, and outcomes.
Keyphrases
- virtual reality
- patient safety
- quality improvement
- wound healing
- healthcare
- systematic review
- meta analyses
- molecular dynamics
- randomized controlled trial
- monte carlo
- liver failure
- primary care
- intensive care unit
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- tyrosine kinase
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- surgical site infection
- chronic pain
- aortic dissection