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Debriefing

Debriefing. Sandra J. Feaster, RN, MS,MBA Program Director Center for Immersive and Simulation-based Learning ( CISL ) Stanford University, CA http://cisl.stanford.edu. DEBRIEFING IS THE “HEART AND SOUL” OF THE SIMULATED EXPERIENCE - RALL, MANSER, & HOWARD, 2000. Objectives.

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Debriefing

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  1. Debriefing Sandra J. Feaster, RN, MS,MBA Program Director Center for Immersive and Simulation-based Learning (CISL) Stanford University, CA http://cisl.stanford.edu

  2. DEBRIEFING IS THE “HEART AND SOUL” OF THE SIMULATED EXPERIENCE- RALL, MANSER, & HOWARD, 2000

  3. Objectives • Identify the goals of debriefing • Discuss the elements of debriefing • Identify various approaches to debriefing • Discuss the process of debriefing • Formulate questions that assist students in self-reflection

  4. Defining Debriefing • Merrian-Webster (1945) • 1 : to interrogate (as a pilot) usually upon return (as from a mission) in order to obtain useful information • 2 : to carefully review upon completion <debrief the flight> • Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia • A debriefing or psychological debriefing is a one-time, semi-structured conversation with an individual who has just experienced a stressful or traumatic event. In most cases, the purpose of debriefing is to reduce any possibility of psychological harm by informing people about their experience or allowing them to talk about it.

  5. Debriefing starts with the “Prebriefing” Prebriefing The instructor should be prepared To understand that learners will come with their own experiences and frames • Describe the purpose of the simulation • The learning objectives • How the process of debriefing will occur • The learner will in turn: • Know the expectations of the simulation • Know the ground rules for their experience

  6. The Origins of Debriefing • Military - • the account individuals gave on returning from a mission • Information analyzed and used to strategize for future missions/exercises (educational & operational) • An aided process to reduce the psychological damage of a traumatic event

  7. The Origins of Debriefing • Critical Incident Debriefing • Used to mitigate stress among emergency first responder • CISD (Critical Incident Stress Debriefing)* • Psychological debriefing (modified CISD)** • Facilitator-led approach to enable participants to review the facts, thoughts, impressions and reactions after a critical incident • Aim - reduce stress and accelerate recovery after a traumatic event • Issue - concern that a single session approach may be inadequate is certain situations or with certain people * Mitchell, JT, Everly GS: Critical incident stress debriefing: An operations manual for the prevention of traumatic stress among emergency services and disaster workers (1993) **Dyregrov A : Caring afor heapers in diseaster situations: Psychological debriefing: Disaster Manage 1989

  8. The Origins of Debriefing • Experimental Psychology • Participants who have been deceived as a part of a psychology study are informed of the true nature of the experiment • Purpose is to allow dehoaxing to occur and reverse the negative effects of the experience

  9. Educating Adult Learners via Simulation • Much of learning from simulation is dependent on the impact of the experience. • The event/experience needs to be relevant to make an impact. • The learner must be moved by the event/experience to make an impact. • EXAMPLE: Simulation with airway obstruction

  10. Learning and Debriefing in Simulation I hear and I forget I see and I remember I do and I understand • Confucius • I trust and discuss • Fanning, Gaba* * Fanning, RM, Gaba, DM, The Role of Debriefing in Situation-based Learning, Simulation in Healthcare, 2007

  11. Debriefing Principles • Foster Discussion in a non-threatening fashion • Capture and leverage “golden or ah-ha” moments • Seek similar real-world experiences • Help apply the experience to real-world practice

  12. Emotional Learning • Emotional state can affect retention and activation • How has the learner “framed” the experience

  13. Reflective Practice • Method used to scrutinize one’s own taken-for granted assumptions and professional work practices. • The theory of reflective practice draws on cognitive science, social psychology, and anthropology. • People make sense of external stimuli through internal cognitive “frames” (or frame of reference, mental models, etc), internal images or external reality. Rudolph, JW, Simon, R, Dufresne, RL, Raemer, DB. There’s No Such Thing as “Nonjudgmental” Debriefing: A Theory and Method for Debriefing with Good Judgment. Simulation in Healthcare, 2006

  14. Frames are invisible to the instructor Debriefing leads to new frames FRAME ACTIONS RESULTS Debriefing changes later actions Rudolph, Simon, Dufresne & Raemer

  15. Factors to consider in debriefing • Objective of the exercise • Complexity of the scenario • Experience level of the learners • Familiarity of learners with the environment • Time available for the session • Role of simulation in curriculum • Individual personalities and relationships

  16. Factors to consider from the facilitators point of view • How many facilitators • Has a plan been worked out in advance for how you will facilitate • What are the personalities of the faciltators? • Talkative, condescending, passive • Where should the facilitator(s) sit?

  17. Practical Aspects of Debriefing • Setting - Physical • Comfortable and private • Think about seating style • In-situ simulations • Setting – Emotional • Prebrief – set the expectations • Confidentiality, role of the facilitator, role of the participant

  18. Practical Aspects - Tips • Questioning • Open ended, non-judgemental • Begin questions with what, how, or why to encourage deeper discussion • Follow-up on participant comments • Make the participant feel their contribution is important • Consider the emotional impact of the exercise

  19. Practical Aspects - Tips • Include ALL participants • Bring the quiet, withdrawn participant into the discussion (they have thoughts about what is happening, but may have trouble sharing) • Reflect questions back to the participants • Use silence appropriately (10 seconds is NOT too long) • Be observant to the body language of the group or individual • Understand group dynamics

  20. Tips • Pros – Cons – Alternatives • Plus (+) Delta

  21. Things to Avoid • Too much instructor talking • Trap of “telling” to teach • Avoid “personal” evaluation before the discussion ends • Too much medical/technical • Too judgementa/condescending • Avoid interruptions • Avoid “guess what I am thinking” • Have an agenda, use cognitive aids……. be flexible

  22. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Generic • Repeating what the participant said to help reiterate a point, or open a discussion • Relate the event to real life • If participants are apathetic, address questions to them by name or go around the room in sequence • Consider starting the debriefing by calling on someone other than the primary participant

  23. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Generic statements • What were the pros, cons, or alternatives to an action • If this were to happen in real life, what might you do in the future • Did you find the scenario challenging

  24. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Opening lines • How do you feel that went • What were your first impressions when you arrived on scene • Did you get an adequate handover • Who/what where are other sources of information about the patient/scenario • Who was the leader • Did you ask for help

  25. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Questions regarding task overload • Were you and others in control of the situation • What needed to be done • How many people would this have required • Ask the other participants how they felt – was the person or scenario overloaded

  26. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Fixation Errors • What did you think was happening • Has anything like this happened in real life • What made it difficult to think of other options or possibilities at the time

  27. HELPFUL QUESTIONS • Wrap up • How did you hand over the scenario • What were the take home messages of the scenario (+ delta or pro, cons, alternatives can help here) • Review the aim of the simulation and how this can help in real life practice • Give the participants the opportunity to discuss/recontact you if there are further questions

  28. In Summary: Elements of a Good Debriefing • Opened ended questions • Positive reinforcement (but not false positive) • Use of cognitive aids • Good use of AV capabiity

  29. In Summary: Elements of a Poor Debriefing • Closed questions • Criticism • Focus on errors • Focus on technical points • Ignoring team work and communication • Focusing too much on the AV or AV problems

  30. Closing Thoughts • Many of our peers feel that debriefing is the most important part of simulation training • Many also feel that poor debriefing can harm the trainee • Most feel a thorough prebriefing is essential • Confidentiality and a non-threatening atmosphere is important

  31. Thank You! sfeaster@stanford.edu http://cisl.stanford.edu

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