Prioritization in medical school simulation curriculum development using survey tools and desirability function: a pilot experiment.
Pier Luigi IngrassiaLudovico Giovanni BarozzaJeffrey Michael FrancPublished in: Advances in simulation (London, England) (2018)
This study identifies those technical competencies thought by faculty to be important and assessed the junior doctors and recent graduates level of self-perceived confidence in performing these skills. The study also identifies the perceived utility of teaching these skills by simulation. The study prioritizes those skills that have a gap between expected and observed competency and are also thought to be amenable to teaching by simulation. This allows immediate priorities for simulation curriculum development in the most effective manner. This methodology may be useful to researchers in other centers to prioritize simulation training.