Clinical Teaching & Simulation
Clinical Teaching & Simulation Fellowship
The Kaweah Delta Clinical Teaching & Simulation Fellowship is a one-year program designed to provide fellows with the skills necessary to become leaders in simulation.
During their one-year fellowship, fellows participate in leading simulation sessions with all 5 residency programs at Kaweah Delta, including the monthly residency simulation sessions in emergency medicine. They also have the opportunity to lead team-based simulation sessions such as Rapid Response Team training, in situ mock code sessions, and pediatric team training in collaboration with the simulation team at Valley Children’s Hospital.
Fellows also are required to create a curriculum for a group of learners of their choice. This includes but is not limited to: faculty development, combined interdepartmental simulation sessions, and high school workshops. Prior fellows have done projects involving simulation in patient satisfaction and creating a lecture series for emergency medicine physician assistants at nearby institutions.
Fellows are expected to attend several lectures a month as part of their own curriculum with the fellowship director. These lectures cover a variety of subjects, including debriefing, writing objectives, creating a CV, and planning a workshop. They also attend a monthly simulation-based journal club with the fellowship director.
Our fellows function as core faculty members in the Department of Emergency Medicine and are eligible for a portion of the site surplus based on their achievements throughout the year. There is a faculty development fund that covers the cost of any desired courses, presentations, and memberships.
Resident Elective
The Kaweah Delta Emergency Medicine Resident Elective in Simulation is a four-week program designed to introduce residents to the world of medical simulation.
During their four-week elective, residents participate in a basic core curriculum involving lectures on debriefing and writing simulation cases, and they attend all lectures already designed for the fellows as described under the “Simulation Fellowship” section. They also have the opportunity to write a scenario of their own and run it for an audience of their choice.
Along with the simulation curriculum as described above, residents also develop their clinical teaching skills by working several “teaching” shifts in the emergency department, where the residents work directly with rotating medical students and emergency medicine interns, providing them one-on-one attention while helping them manage their patients.