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National Nurses Week: Simulation labs key to students' education

May 11, 2021

National Nurses Week: Simulation labs key to students' education

By Michele Coffill

A cornerstone of Grand Valley's nursing education is simulation, allowing students to learn skills in a lab setting using high-tech mannequins or standardized patients. 

The Kirkhof College of Nursing simulation team adapted simulation labs during the COVID-19 pandemic and said flexibility and creativity were keys to making them successful.

Deborah Bambini, professor of nursing, has served as simulation coordinator for KCON since 2006. Bambini said pandemic restrictions led to smaller groups of students rotating through in-person and virtual simulations.

Sherri Fannon, assistant professor of nursing, said the simulation team found advantages through adaptation, including individual student debriefing sessions rather than as a class.

One interdisciplinary simulation had Grand Valley nursing and physical therapy students teamed with physician and pharmacy students from, respectively, Michigan State University College of Human Medicine and Ferris State University. Teams then conducted a home visit with a standardized patient, who was trained to portray a patient with a lung disease.

Bambini said when the Daniel and Pamella DeVos Center for Interprofessional Health opens for students, the simulation space will more than double. "The new building will provide space for 24 standardized patient rooms and 10 hospital rooms," she said.

Bambini, who joined Grand Valley's faculty in 1993, will retire before the DCIH opens. Fannon, who had worked at the MSU CHM Simulation Center, will lead the KCON simulation team with Christina Quick, assistant professor of nursing.

"We have a very inventive faculty simulation team and putting our heads together as a team has advantages," Fannon said. "We are supported by KCON leadership and the Simulation Center staff to give the best virtual and in-person experiences we can, and students are meeting competency requirements demonstrating they're ready to move to another semester."

"It gave students true closure following a simulation exercise," Fannon said. "We had time with each student individually to reflect and ask additional questions."

See more simulation lab photos here: https://www.gvsu.edu/gvnext/2021/national-nurses-week-simulation-labs-key-to-students-education.htm 

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Page last modified May 11, 2021