Simulation-based training significantly improved confidence and clinical skills of resident doctors in acute diabetes management
Persad, Kalyaani ; Khatoon, Aqeelah ; Buchipudi, Aashritha ; Jie Yee, Amanda Ling ; Philip, Nevil C ; Sharma, Angelica ; Sinha, Akshat ; Salahuddin, Sofia ; Kempegowda, Punith
Persad, Kalyaani
Khatoon, Aqeelah
Buchipudi, Aashritha
Jie Yee, Amanda Ling
Philip, Nevil C
Sharma, Angelica
Sinha, Akshat
Salahuddin, Sofia
Kempegowda, Punith
Abstract
Aims: The joint consensus of the American Diabetes Association and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes highlights the need for practical, up-to-date training in acute diabetes care. Therefore, this session aimed to develop an applied learning intervention that identifies key gaps in acute diabetes training, assesses participants' change in confidence in managing these scenarios following the intervention and evaluates participants' satisfaction and the intervention's relevance to practice.
Methods: To design the programme, we adopted Kern's six-step curriculum development framework. Clinical experts were interviewed to assess general needs, and students and resident doctors were interviewed to assess targeted needs. The SIMBA (Simulation via Instant Messaging for Bedside Application) model was adopted to develop cases alongside generative AI and expert input. Pre- and post-session surveys assessed participants' confidence, while the latter also assessed satisfaction and relevance to practice.
Results: 33 participants attended the session. 17 participants completed both pre- and post-session surveys and were included in the study. Simulation performance scores averaged 4.0/5 for history taking, interpretation and clinical judgement; 3.9/5 for physical examination and investigations; and 3.6/5 for management. Confidence in managing acute diabetes scenarios improved significantly (pre vs. post: 33.3% vs. 78.4%, p < 0.001). 94.1% strongly agreed the cases were relevant, and 82.3% preferred this teaching method over traditional approaches.
Conclusion: The model identified the need for targeted education on physical examination, investigations and management specific to acute diabetes scenarios. Simulation-based education significantly enhances confidence and is perceived as highly relevant for training in acute diabetes management.
MIDER Authors
Date
2025-06-17
Type
Article
Subject
Diabetes Mellitus, Simulation Training, Education, Professional
Collections
Citation
Persad K, Khatoon A, Buchipudi A, Jie Yee AL, Philip NC, Sharma A, Sinha A, Salahuddin S, Kempegowda P; DEVI collaboration. Simulation-based training significantly improved confidence and clinical skills of resident doctors in acute diabetes management. Diabet Med. 2025 Sep;42(9):e70068. doi: 10.1111/dme.70068. Epub 2025 Jun 17.
Journal / Source Title
Diabetic Medicine
DOI
10.1111/dme.70068
PMID
40526722
Publisher
Blackwell Science
Publisher’s URL
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/14645491
