Author(s)
Asao, ShuneiLewis, Brett
Harrison, James D
Glass, Marcia
Brock, Tina Penick
Dandu, Madhavi
Le, Phuoc
Keywords
Behavioral and Social ScienceClinical Research
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
8.3 Policy
ethics
and research governance
Health and social care services research
Generic health relevance
Ethics
Global Health
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https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9735j18rAbstract
IntroductionMany health care trainees and providers have reported feeling unprepared for the ethical dilemmas they faced while practicing in global health. Simulation is an effective teaching modality in the training of health care professionals. This resource describes the development, implementation, and assessment of an innovative simulation training program for global health ethics.MethodsWe conducted simulation training with trainees and professionals from various health care disciplines. After a didactic component in which general ethical principles were introduced, participants acted as either lead or observer in four simulations representing different ethical challenges. Participants interacted with simulated patients within a set designed to resemble a resource-constrained environment. Data on the participants' experiences and evaluations of the program's effectiveness were collected through pre-/postsession surveys and focus groups.ResultsAll 53 participants (100%) agreed that the simulations "effectively highlighted ethical dilemmas I could face abroad," and 98% agreed that the content "was useful in my preparation for an international elective." Responses from surveys and focus groups stressed the importance of the realistic and emotional nature of the simulation in increasing confidence and preparedness, as well as a preference for simulation as the modality for teaching global health ethics.DiscussionSimulation for global health ethics training can help to raise awareness of the complex ethical challenges one may face abroad. Incorporating simulation training within broader global health curricula can improve trainee preparedness and confidence in appropriately and effectively identifying, strategizing, and navigating through ethical dilemmas in the field.Date
2017-06-07Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt9735j18rqt9735j18r
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9735j18r