The Debriefing consists of 3 parts:
1. Session Feedback
2. Self-Guiding Questions
3. Post-Simulation Quiz
Faculty members (i.e. Trainers or Admins) can edit the Debriefing within the scenario Editor. Below are the steps:
1. In the scenario catalog, select a scenario. Please Note: Tutorial scenarios cannot be edited.
2. Click the 'Actions' button on the top right, and select the Edit option available to you. (If it's a scenario that was originally created by UbiSim, you will only have the option to 'Duplicate & Edit' in order to preserve the integrity of the original scenario):
3. Once in the Editor, Click the Debriefing tab:
The following sections will go over the previously mentioned parts of the Debriefing page in the Editor:
1. Feedback
Students and faculty have access to various feedback reports:
The automatic feedback report has 3 components:
a. Feedback based on how students performed against the checklist.
The checklist (s) is available in each state of the scenario. The checklist is free text and can be edited as necessary to meet your curriculum's needs.
b. Transition feedback.
This is high-level feedback for students which explains why the scenario progressed the way it did. This feedback is free text and can be edited as necessary to meet your curriculum's needs.
c. Performance Gaps.
This is a report on critical actions that students perform incorrectly/forget to perform in a scenario based on access to equipment and medications in the scenario. This also includes all actions that were not checked off on the checklist.
2. Self-Guiding Questions and Quiz
This includes debriefing text. UbiSim follows Pearl's debriefing framework.
However, you can easily edit and follow any debriefing framework you wish to use instead.
Our pre-made quiz includes links to evidence-based readings so students can understand the rationale behind them. You can edit, add or remove questions as you see fit.
You can also add a case study to this section as well as include a clinical situation.
A case study contains the clinical situation(s) and question(s) under a particular topic.
The case study can consist of one or more clinical situation (or phases) that describes what is going on with the patient. Each clinical situation can have one or more questions that pertain to it. A simple case study may just have one clinical situation, with a group of questions pertaining to it.
An unfolding case study depicts the patient's condition over time, so it will have more than one clinical situation, with each clinical situation having questions that pertain to it.
Our Feedback reports and Self Guiding Quiz are free text and fully customizable. You can edit and delete them as you wish.