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Virtual Patients

Virtual Patients. David Topps Heather Armson UofC L&T Conf May 2014. OpenLabyrinth Virtual Patients. http://openlabyrinth.ca. Workshop Outline. Introductions & Needs Overview of Virtual Patients Case examples Conclusions and next steps. Introductions. Who are you?

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Virtual Patients

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  1. Virtual Patients David Topps Heather Armson UofC L&T Conf May 2014

  2. OpenLabyrinth Virtual Patients http://openlabyrinth.ca

  3. Workshop Outline • Introductions & Needs • Overview of Virtual Patients • Case examples • Conclusions and next steps

  4. Introductions • Who are you? • Role in education?

  5. Overview of Virtual Patients

  6. What are Virtual Patients?

  7. Not Virtual Reality

  8. Power of the Narrative

  9. Choose Your Own Adventure

  10. Branching and Linear cases • Dealing with the consequences

  11. Sarah-Jane case St George’s University, London http://www.elu.sgul.ac.uk/virtualpatients/examples/sarah_jane/SJP_h_21_NT_HM.html

  12. “The pictures are better on the radio.” Alistair Cooke

  13. Cues in the environment

  14. Uses of Virtual Patients • Simple case presentations • Shorter rather than longer • Self-directed learning • Small group discussions • Flipped-classroom approach • Assessment of problem solving

  15. PINE Library

  16. Everything is tracked • Timing • Paths • Counters

  17. Everything is tracked

  18. Everything is measured

  19. Assessment of problem solving

  20. Situational Judgment Testing • Better for non-clinical eg ethics • http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/382

  21. Virtual patients as bookends

  22. Breakout to SimMan

  23. Virtual EMR

  24. Learning from mistakes • Err in safety • Scenario Based Learning • Ruth Colvin Clark

  25. 13:30 Your ideas…? Work in 2-3’s Return in 5mins

  26. Complexityisn’t everything

  27. Case examples • VP on VPs • http://vp.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/49 • Careersboard game • http://vp.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/45 • Street DrugGuide • http://vp.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/37

  28. Using a concept mapper • http://vue.tufts.edu/ • Free flexible conceptmappingtool • http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca/ • Built-in Visual Editor

  29. Define the Design

  30. Your first - KISS

  31. Uncle Sam needs you! Second person narrative style

  32. Discover the facts • Just the facts, ma’am • Don’t hand it to them on a plate

  33. Working with OpenLabyrinth • Create a case • Visual editor • Node editor • HTML editing • Images • Avatars

  34. Layout of a node

  35. Key design points - reprise • Have you defined your main learning points? • Do you have a story to tell? • Have you made them think?

  36. Next steps

  37. What do I need? • Web browser • Tech help or a teenager • Access to an OpenLabyrinth server • http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca/ • All are free • (except for the teenager!)

  38. Further resources • OpenLabyrinth web site • http://openlabyrinth.ca • Virtual Patient on Virtual Patients • http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/49 • Making a gin and tonic • http://demo.openlabyrinth.ca/renderLabyrinth/index/89

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