Simulation as a Surgical Teaching Model

Publication date: Available online 14 February 2018 Source:Cirugía Española (English Edition) Author(s): José Luis Ruiz-Gómez, José Ignacio Martín-Parra, Mónica González-Noriega, Carlos Godofredo Redondo-Figuero, José Carlos Manuel-Palazuelos Teaching of surgery has been affected by many factors over the last years, such as the reduction of working hours, the optimization of the use of the operating room or patient safety. Traditional teaching methodology fails to reduce the impact of these factors on surgeon's training. Simulation as a teaching model minimizes such impact, and is more effective than traditional teaching methods for integrating knowledge and clinical–surgical skills. Simulation complements clinical assistance with training, creating a safe learning environment where patient safety is not affected, and ethical or legal conflicts are avoided. Simulation uses learning methodologies that allow teaching individualization, adapting it to the learning needs of each student. It also allows training of all kinds of technical, cognitive or behavioral skills.
Source: Cirugia Espanola - Category: Surgery Source Type: research