Project information
Training against medical error - TAME (TAME)

Information

This project doesn't include Faculty of Science. It includes Faculty of Medicine. Official project website can be found on muni.cz.
Investor logo
Project Identification
561583-EEP-1-2015-1-KZ-EPPKA2-
Project Period
10/2015 - 1/2019
Investor / Pogramme / Project type
European Union
MU Faculty or unit
Faculty of Medicine
Cooperating Organization
University of Thessaloniki
Karolinska Institutet
St Georges, University of London
Karaganda State Medical University
Astana Medical University
Bukovinian State Medical University
Zaporozhye State Medical University
The National University of Malaysia
Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia

TAME builds upon the recent introduction of interactive VP cases for training in both eViP ePBLnet and Clinical Reasoning in CROESUS. It includes associate partners and bidding partners (in total numbering more than 25 institutions) from all previous projects, and involving applicants from all these previous projects. In many ways these previous projects teach the principle of clinical decision-making. but this project goes to the next level.This project takes the use of VPs one important step further, by targeting the most important factor in clinical education, patient safety, and asks the question how can we best adapt VPs to maximise the possibilities of training against medical error? The process would be to use VPs in later parts of the course, VPs which are specific and more detailed in clinical attachments. The virtual patients should be able to challenge the students’ thought process built on the knowledge acquired during their early years of their degree. They would be constructed to allow students to take wrong decisions, decisions that seem entirely plausible and are usually based on real-world incidents; students would take actions based on those decisions, and experience the consequences of those actions. Pedagogically this project addresses a fundamental issue in clinical management, to safely train learners in making correct decisions, without compromising patient safety and without requiring exposure to every clinical situation or disease the student may need to be familiar with.

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