Journal article

Understanding the impact of simulated patients on health care learners’ communication skills: a systematic review

J Kaplonyi, KA Bowles, D Nestel, D Kiegaldie, S Maloney, T Haines, C Williams

Medical Education | Published : 2017

Abstract

Context: Effective communication skills are at the core of good health care. Simulated patients (SPs) are increasingly engaged as an interactive means of teaching, applying and practising communication skills with immediate feedback. There is a large body of research into the use of manikin-based simulation but a gap exists in the body of research on the effectiveness of SP-based education to teach communication skills that impact patient outcomes. The aim of this systematic review was to critically analyse the existing research, investigating whether SP-based communication skills training improves learner–patient communication, how communication skill improvement is measured, and who measur..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by U.S. Department of Health and Human Services


Funding Acknowledgements

this research was funded from a 'Simulation Patient Safety Research' project funding grant from the Department of Health and Human Services Victoria, Australia (ID3108). TH is funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council Career Research Fellowship; CW is funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council Health Professional Early Career Fellowship.