Stress and resilience among military medical students completing a high-fidelity military medical simulation

Rebekah Cole, Michael V. Bronstein
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Abstract

Background High-fidelity medical simulations can help students successfully navigate the stressors of medical training and practice. Because sufficiently high stress levels can interfere with learning, the balance of stress and resilience factors during simulation training should be carefully curated. However, student experiences of stress and resilience during high-fidelity simulations are seldom well characterized, especially in military medical training. With this in mind, the authors investigated students’ lived experiences of stress and resilience during a well-established high-fidelity simulation at a military medical school. Methods Fourth-year active-duty military medical students (n = 23) from the United States Air Force, Army, and Navy who were attending Operation Bushmaster – a 5-day, high-fidelity military medical simulation – were interviewed during and after the simulation. Data were analyzed via a hermeneutic phenomenological qualitative approach. Another 21 students reported their stress levels and trait mindfulness. Experts rated their performance at Operation Bushmaster. Results Participant narratives pointed towards major internal stressors, including chronic uncertainty and fluctuating motivation, and external stressors, such as weather and equipment-related challenges. Narratives also identified multiple factors that mitigated stress, including the use of mindfulness skills (especially mindful/tactical breathing), giving/receiving social support, shifting perspectives to centre connections between Operation Bushmaster and students’ professional purpose, and positive self-talk that gave participants permission to make mistakes and learn from them. There was a moderate positive correlation between mindfulness and performance at Operation Bushmaster. Conclusions These stress and resilience factors are critical leverage points for educators seeking to optimize learning during Operation Bushmaster and other high-fidelity simulation trainings. Future research should continue to examine how the balance of these factors impacts medical students’ immediate learning (e.g. regarding medical decision-making, skill and leadership) and longer-term ability to successfully navigate the stressors of the medical profession.
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完成高仿真军事医学模拟的军医学生的压力和复原力
背景 高保真医学模拟可帮助学生成功应对医学培训和实践中的压力。由于足够高的压力水平会干扰学习,因此在模拟训练过程中,应仔细调节压力和恢复力因素之间的平衡。然而,学生在高仿真模拟训练中的压力和抗压能力很少得到很好的描述,尤其是在军事医学训练中。有鉴于此,作者调查了一所军事医学院校学生在成熟的高仿真模拟训练中的压力和恢复能力体验。方法 对来自美国空军、陆军和海军的四年级现役军医学生(n = 23)进行了访谈,他们参加了为期 5 天的高仿真军事医学模拟培训 "布什马斯特行动"(Operation Bushmaster)。通过诠释现象学定性方法对数据进行了分析。另外 21 名学生报告了他们的压力水平和心智特质。专家对他们在 "布什马斯特行动 "中的表现进行了评分。结果 参与者的叙述指出了主要的内部压力因素,包括长期的不确定性和波动的动机,以及外部压力因素,如天气和与设备相关的挑战。叙述还指出了缓解压力的多种因素,包括正念技能的使用(尤其是正念/战术呼吸)、给予/接受社会支持、转换视角,将 "布什马斯特行动 "与学生的职业目标联系起来,以及积极的自我对话,允许参与者犯错并从中吸取教训。正念与 "布什马斯特行动 "的表现之间存在中等程度的正相关。结论 这些压力和复原力因素是教育工作者在 "布什马斯特行动 "和其他高仿真模拟训练中寻求优化学习的关键杠杆点。未来的研究应继续探讨这些因素的平衡如何影响医学生的直接学习(如医学决策、技能和领导力)以及成功应对医学专业压力的长期能力。
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