Moncton Hospital raising money for simulation labs, where doctors can get practise - Action News
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New Brunswick

Moncton Hospital raising money for simulation labs, where doctors can get practise

Two simulation labs will be coming to the Moncton Hospital, a project aimed at helping health-care providers, including doctors and nurses, practise their skills on smart mannequins.

Fundraisers say labs will make area more attractive to doctors deciding where to work

On the left, two women in blue scrubs both hold a medical device, wrapped in fuchsia cloth. On the right, a doctor in a white coat holds a clipboard. A woman and a man surround a mannequin on the hospital bed. The man has his gloved hand on the mannequin's stomach and the woman holds the mannequin's shoulder and hand.
Simulation labs can be used to practise surgeries, routine procedures and even baby delivery. (Submitted by Friends of the Moncton Hospital Foundation/Laerdal Medical Canada)

Two simulation labs will be coming to the Moncton Hospital to help health-care providers practise their skills on "smart mannequins."

Friends of the Moncton Hospital Foundation is raising the $850,000 needed for the labs.

The labs will be used for practising surgeries, routine procedures and even baby delivery.

Greg King, the president and CEO of the foundation, said the mannequins will do everything a real patient would do. He said health-care teams will be able to hone their skills in a simulation before facing the same situation in real life. Similar labs already exist in the region, but Moncton plans something different, he said.

"We want to develop a more thorough program, where all of the different health-care professions are part of it, and where we feel it's going to impact pretty much every inch of the hospital," said King.

A man stands centre wearing a suit. He holds a sign that says
Greg King, the president and CEO of Friends of the Moncton Hospital Foundation, said the simulation labs will do a lot to recruit resident doctors to the region. (Submitted by Friends of the Moncton Hospital Foundation)

So far, the foundation has raised $100,000 with an internal campaign toward their $1.1 million goal, to be split into the $850,000 for the simulation labs and $250,000 for a retention and recruitment endowment. The campaign is beginning now and will likely end in the spring, depending on how fundraising goes,he said.

One lab will be located in the obstetrics and newborn care building now being constructed, and the other will be in the former obstetrics operating room.

Dr. Andrew MacLean, a family medicine resident in Fredericton, said he's used simulation labs at Dalhousie University and at McMaster University.

He said they are helpful during the learning phase because people using them can get feedback before facing an urgent situation.

A man in a turquoise patient gown is under a blue blanket in a hospital bed, propped up by a blue pillow. A woman wearing yellow is to his right with her hand on his forearm. A doctor is to his left and has a hand resting behind him.
Dr. Angus MacDonald, one of only two Canadian certified simulationists at the Moncton Hospital, tends to a patient. (Submitted by Friends of the Moncton Hospital Foundation)

"These learning experiences are increasingly important for medical students, for nurses, for respiratory therapists, and it's about the quality of the experience you're able to offer," said MacLean. "And to do that, unfortunately, these simulation labs are expensive They cost a lot of money."

King said the simulation labs will do a lot to recruit resident doctors to the region.

He said when doctors cometoNew Brunswick for their residencies, a lot of them stay in the region. This project, along with arecruitment and retention effort, will impact thousands of patients requiring family doctors, he said.

Dr. Andrew MacLean, a family medicine resident in Fredericton, said simulation labs are 'an important piece to the puzzle,' when it comes to recruiting medical residents to the province. (Submitted by Andrew MacLean)

For doctors who are at the resident stage of their training,simulation labs are "an important piece to the puzzle," MacLean said.

He said students inmedical schoolhave the opportunity to look into residency programs across the country. Part of their decision, MacLean said, will come from thequality of the educational experience and up-to-date technology.

He said it's an excellent idea for Moncton Hospital to add these labs and to be thinking about how to offer the best possible learning experience.

"Having access to these facilities and labs is very important to the overall educational experience," said MacLean.

"So[it is] definitely something that we take into consideration when we think about where we'd like to end up in terms of our medical training and hopefully future practice."

With files from Information Morning Moncton