Emergency Medicine Residents Test a New UF-Developed Mixed Reality Simulator

Safety Through Simulation

By Meredith Rutland
Dr. Albert R. Robinson watches Dr. Elizabeth Flail, a first-year emergency medicine resident, place a central venous catheter during a simulation. Robinson is surveying the effectiveness of the central venous catheter placement simulation in teaching residents.
Dr. Albert R. Robinson watches Dr. Elizabeth Flail, a first-year emergency medicine resident, place a central venous catheter during a simulation. Robinson is surveying the effectiveness of the central venous catheter placement simulation in teaching residents.

Emergency medicine residents tested a new UF-developed mixed reality simulator in September that lets the user get valuable experience in a safe way. Residents practiced on a subclavian central venous access simulator by injecting the tip of a needle directly into the subclavian vein of a digital dummy while avoiding its artery and lung. A sensor tracks and records 3-D images of where the needle moves in the body and tells the user whether he or she has hit a vital organ or the desired vein. Sem Lampotang, Ph.D., director of the Center for Safety, Simulation & Advanced Learning Technologies, said UF has applied for a patent for the technology. Al Robinson, M.D., is studying whether the simulator is an effective teaching tool for residents. “The preliminary results show that it seems to be making a difference,” Lampotang said. “The residents’ performance is getting better.”

http://post.health.ufl.edu/2011/10/11/safety-through-simulation/

 

This entry was posted in News. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.