Transforming the Future of Nursing Education
By Brett Bralley
Photo credit: James Tensuan
Virtual reality simulation training placed 皇冠体育博彩 ahead of the curve when the pandemic struck.
Before anyone had even heard of COVID-19, Deborah Nelson, lecturer and simulation program coordinator for the San Jos茅 State Valley Foundation School of Nursing, was preparing for it 鈥 she just didn鈥檛 know it yet.
Pre-pandemic, Nelson often gathered a class of about 10 nursing students in the briefing room of 皇冠体育博彩鈥檚 simulation lab. The group of undergraduates would pull out their smartphones, position them into a pair of virtual reality (VR) goggles, and place the goggles over their eyes. Then, they would watch as, just a room away, a training simulation took place.
Using a simulation lab in nursing education is nothing new; many programs across the country teach students clinical skills using manikins before they interact with real patients. Typically, one to two students participate in a simulation at a time while the rest observe. At 皇冠体育博彩, students usually observed on a TV screen outside the simulation room.
But virtual reality offers a more immersed and individualized approach for onlookers, explained Nelson. Using VR goggles, students can focus on the active participant鈥檚 interaction with the patient. Or, they can look around the whole room: They can check the patient鈥檚 vital signs on a nearby screen, identify safety hazards and note the patient鈥檚 medications.
鈥淭he observer is in control of what they want to focus on to best meet their learning needs,鈥 Nelson said.
The VR program Nelson uses 鈥 along with other faculty in the nursing school and beyond 鈥 is , a health education platform created by alumnus Bryan Dang, 鈥16 Nursing. The tool combines VR, an immersive 360-degree camera, interactive chat features and learning modules to allow students and instructors to study patient care from anywhere.
And while Syminar has been instrumental in its own right, as Nelson explained, it was a game-changer when the pandemic began and higher education shifted to mostly online learning. Now, as students and faculty start to return to campus at 皇冠体育博彩 and across the country, Syminar has proven that VR in health-care education is here to stay.
A student, an idea and a space for innovation
Alice Wu, 鈥21 Nursing, shows how to view a simulation using VR goggles. Video courtesy
of Bryan Dang.
While nursing educators agree that simulation training is an integral part of learning how to treat patients, simulation labs can be expensive and occupy a lot of space. Dang was looking for a way around that.
He came to 皇冠体育博彩 in 2013 with two interests: nursing and human factors, or the study of how humans interact with and use technology. Dang鈥檚 experience volunteering at Stanford Hospital helped him realize he wanted to help others, and time spent working at Google as a real estate specialist taught him that the right technology can make a difference in everyday life.
When he was a junior, Dang was tapped to collaborate with 皇冠体育博彩鈥檚 Interdisciplinary Design Collaborative 鈥 now the Innovation Development Center 鈥 which works to provide students and faculty with the resources to innovate and become successful entrepreneurs.
He partnered with a team of graduate engineering students to present an idea at an upcoming showcase challenge. But not just any idea: 鈥淭he requirement of the challenge was to create a novel application of a new and exciting technology,鈥 Dang explained.
The team chose to focus on virtual reality, and after some brainstorming, they realized they could simplify simulation training in a way that would bring down costs to institutions and increase student engagement all in one tool.
Later, Syminar officially launched as a startup in 2018, and San Jos茅 State was one of the early users of the platform. The School of Nursing implemented Syminar to enhance simulation training. The School of Social Work, the departments of Kinesiology and Audiology, and 皇冠体育博彩鈥檚 Stem Cell Internship in Laboratory-Based Learning program have all either adopted or are about to introduce the platform into their curriculum.
鈥淪chools have been used to buying four or five software components and using them in tandem,鈥 Dang said. 鈥淭hink about before the iPhone existed: There was a phone, and then there was an mp3 player, and then we used a web browser, right? Those were all separate tools. The iPhone took those tools and brought them together. That鈥檚 what we鈥檙e trying to do with Syminar.鈥
Back in 2011, the School of Nursing received an endowment from the Valley Foundation to expand the Clinical Simulation Center. The facility houses an acute care lab, an ICU and a space where students can deliver babies and monitor postpartum mothers. There鈥檚 even a simulated apartment for learning how to manage patients in settings outside of the clinic.
But not all nursing programs have the opportunity to build such state-of-the-art facilities, explained Dang.
Syminar offers students the chance to log on from any location to watch nursing simulations, which saves space, requires fewer manikins and also helps to accommodate all types of students and learning needs.
In fact, Syminar simulations don鈥檛 even have to be live; successful demonstrations can be used over and over, which turned out to be crucial for 皇冠体育博彩 once COVID-19 took hold.
Going virtual during a crisis
皇冠体育博彩 Nursing students testing VR headsets in the classroom. Photo courtesy of Bryan
Dang.
When Nelson could no longer hold live simulation sessions in March 2020, she and Dang dug through 皇冠体育博彩鈥檚 trove of recordings to set up classes for students remotely.
鈥淚t took only about three days,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e never would have been able to transition that quickly if it weren鈥檛 for Syminar. We did change the objectives in some ways. Now, I create a course that provides content information and structured clinical reasoning questions to guide the students as they view the video.鈥
Colleen O鈥橪eary-Kelley, director of the School of Nursing put it simply: While other institutions were scrambling to find solutions once the stay-at-home orders took effect, 鈥渨e were ahead of the curve,鈥 she said.
When the pandemic arrived, many clinical sites immediately closed their doors to nursing students who needed direct patient-experience hours for graduation, , citing a lack of equipment and resources, plus a need to protect patients.
In response, California nursing schools advocated for the state to ease the graduation requirement for clinical hours, which resulted in the passage of , a bill that allowed up to 50 percent of the hours to be replaced with simulation learning.
Still, restrictions meant students and faculty couldn鈥檛 gather in-person to practice simulations, which presented the added challenge of finding a way to get those hours. Having Syminar in place helped make sure 皇冠体育博彩 nursing students graduated on time.
鈥淕raduating students on time or keeping them on track in the program right now, that鈥檚 huge,鈥 said Nelson.
Ensuring nursing students graduate during the pandemic helps the state keep up with its efforts to address its nursing shortage, NPR reported. The pandemic, coupled with a (something 皇冠体育博彩 is also working to address), led some California programs to accept fewer students than usual in the fall 鈥 or even opting to not not enroll any new students at all in 2020, according to NPR.
鈥淒eveloping nursing competency requires hands-on training that is difficult to accomplish virtually,鈥 said O鈥橪eary-Kelley.
鈥淗aving access to Syminar provided an immersive environment that allowed for students to apply clinical knowledge in a realistic setting. As a result, students were able to graduate or matriculate to the next level without significant loss in knowledge of nursing practice.鈥
The case for simulation and the case for VR
(L-R) O'Leary-Kelley, Dang and Jeland Palicte, '16 Nursing, in the 皇冠体育博彩 Simulation
Center.
In a world where 鈥淶oom fatigue鈥 has become commonplace, Dang says research shows this isn鈥檛 the case when using VR. In fact, out of all the ways students observe simulation training, it may be one of the highest in terms of engagement level.
In a recent study, of students observing a simulation in four different ways: an active participant, a bedside observer, an observer watching a TV monitor with live audio-visual feed in a separate room, and an 鈥渋mmersive telepresence,鈥 or VR, observer with Syminar.
Dang found that VR users scored much higher in their perceived presence and engagement than observers in the audio-visual room, and those scores were similar to active participant learners.
That perceived presence is high for Jeffrey Beach, 鈥22 Nursing, who said that when he is watching a scenario using Syminar, he explores the room around him to get the bigger picture of what鈥檚 going on with the patient.
鈥淚 can move the camera around and go take a look at the vital sign monitor, for example,鈥 he shared. 鈥淲ith the immersive 360-degree camera, you really get a better feel overall.鈥
In fact, he says even observing a pre-recorded simulation can make him feel nervous.
鈥淓ven though you鈥檙e not physically doing things, you still feel that pressure. Your instructor is watching you, judging your interactions with the patient, and you feel like, because you鈥檙e a student, you could mess something up.鈥
But that鈥檚 precisely the point, noted O鈥橪eary-Kelley, and that鈥檚 why simulation training is such an essential part of nursing education.
鈥淪imulation is focused on the learner,鈥 she explained. 鈥淪tudents come to a simulation with a certain frame of reference that oftentimes is incorrect. So we have to uncover that gently. Things get clarified in a safe way. It鈥檚 positive learning.鈥
Bree Casas, 鈥22 Nursing, who uses she/they pronouns, can attest to that. Through Syminar, Casas has learned to observe the entire room when caring for a patient 鈥 including anything that might jeopardize a patient鈥檚 safety. They said that instructors have pointed out missed safety hazards, like a patient wearing socks on a slippery tile floor, which could cause the patient to fall.
鈥淚t gives us the chance to be wrong without harming patients or affecting patient outcomes,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t also gives the chance for students who might not be quite as outgoing or knowledgeable to learn from their peers, which I think is a good thing.鈥
That engagement and learning experience with Syminar is one reason VR won鈥檛 be going anywhere once students and faculty return to campus, said Nelson.
鈥淪yminar has proven to be a key tool in effective learning in both the in-person and remote learning environment,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t has assisted in having options for 皇冠体育博彩鈥檚 nursing students to continue on their journey towards graduation and towards service to the community.鈥
Learn more about simulation training in nursing education at San Jos茅 State. To learn more about Syminar and see how it works, .