A Modified Delphi Study for Curricular Content of Simulation-Based Medical Education for Pediatric Residency Programs

Lorel Huber*, Ryan Good, Meredith F. Bone, Shannon M. Flood, Ryan Fredericks, Frank Overly, Nancy M. Tofil, Robyn Wing, Kathryn Walsh

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: We sought to establish core knowledge topics and skills that are important to teach pediatric residents using simulation-based medical education (SBME). Methods: We conducted a modified Delphi process with experts in pediatric SBME. Content items were adapted from the American Board of Pediatrics certifying exam content and curricular components from pediatric entrustable professional activities (EPAs). In round 1, participants rated 158 items using a four-point Likert scale of importance to teach through simulation in pediatric residency. A priori, we defined consensus for item inclusion as ≥70% rated the item as extremely important and exclusion as ≥70% rated the item not important. Criteria for stopping the process included reaching consensus to include and/or exclude all items, with a maximum of three rounds. Results: A total of 59 participants, representing 46 programs and 25 states participated in the study. Response rates for the three rounds were 92%, 86% and 90%, respectively. The final list includes 112 curricular content items deemed by our experts as important to teach through simulation in pediatric residency. Seventeen procedures were included. Nine of the seventeen EPAs had at least one content item that experts considered important to teach through simulation as compared to other modalities. Conclusions: Using consensus methodology, we identified the curricular items important to teach pediatric residents using SBME. Next steps are to design a simulation curriculum to encompass this content.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)856-865
Number of pages10
JournalAcademic Pediatrics
Volume24
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Funding

The study team acknowledges the International Network for Simulation-based Pediatric Innovation, Research, & Education (INSPIRE) for their expertise in helping to develop this project. Financial Statement: No external funding. AdventHealth for Children: Jonathan Chan; AdventHealth for Children: Shani Cunningham; Advocate Children's Hospital - Park Ridge: Vinod Havalad; Advocate Children's Hospital: Heidi Greening; Baylor College of Medicine/Texas Children's Hospital: Daniel Lemke; Brown University/Hasbro Children's Hospital: Sarah Spencer Welsh; Central Michigan University/Children's Hospital of Michigan: Rajan Arora; Children's Hospital of Michigan: Ji-Yeon Kim; Children's Hospital of Philadelphia: Jeanine Ronan; Children's National Hospital: Jeremy Kern; Children's National Hospital/George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences: Pavan Zaveri; East Tennessee State University: Lauren Selzer; Emory University School of Medicine/Children's Healthcare of Atlanta: Kiran Hebbar; Golisano Children's Hospital at SUNY Upstate: Jennifer Carbone Zuccaro; Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai: Jennifer Gillen; Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai: Tania Lopez-Pichardo; John Hopkins University School of Medicine: Nicole Shilkofski; Kaiser Northern California Pediatric Residency Program: Rina Shah; Lehigh Valley Reilly Children's Hospital: Amy Lindmark; Mayo Clinic Children's Center: Lezlie Andersen; Mayo Clinic Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine Residency: Stephanie Mavis; McGaw Medical Center/Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago: Karen Mangold; Medical College of Wisconsin: Amanda Rogers; Medstar Georgetown University Hospital: Elizabeth M. Chawla; Memorial Health Medical Center/Children's Hospital of Savannah: Andrew Stack; Nationwide Children's Hospital: Claire Stewart; Nemours Children's Health: Maria Carmen G. Diaz; New York University Grossman School of Medicine/Hassenfeld Children's Hospital: Sharon Calaman; NYU Grossman School of Medicine: Daniel B Eidman; Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences/Oklahoma State University Medical Center: Shawna Duncan; One Brooklyn Health - Brookdale: Lita Aeder; Penn State Health Pediatrics: Adrian Zurca; Phoenix Children's Pediatric Residency Program Alliance: Jon McGreevy; St. Christopher's Hospital for Children: Kheyandra D. Lewis; St. Louis Children's Hospital/Washington University School of Medicine: Sara Greer; Texas Tech University Health Science Center: Summer Davies; The Barbara Bush Children's Hospital at Maine Medical Center: Leah Mallory; University of California Irvine/Children's Hospital of Orange County: Nandini Arul; University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children's: Ingrid Anderson; University of California Irvine/Children's Hospital of Orange County: Jason Cook; University of Chicago: Alisa McQueen; University of Connecticut/Connecticut Children's: Carla M. Pruden; University of Florida,Gainesville: Nancy Joseph; University of Missouri: Akshaya J Vachharajani; University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center/Oklahoma Children's Hospital: Amy Sparkman; University of Rochester Medical Center/Golisano Children's Hospital: Rita Dadiz; University of Rochester/Golisano Children's Hospital: Justin Lynn; University of Tennessee Health Science Center/Le Bonheur Children's Hospital: Laurel Metzler; University of Wisconsin/American Family Children's Hospital: Adam S. Bauer; Valley Children's Healthcare: Kimberly Bilskey; Weill Cornell Medicine: Kevin Ching; Weill Cornell Medicine NewYork-Presbyterian: Timothy C. Clapper; West Virginia University School of Medicine/WVU Medicine Children's: Joseph Lynch.

Keywords

  • graduate medical education
  • pediatrics
  • simulation-based medical education

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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