CHAPTER 5 Attendance and Scheduling Issues
Yea verily, hear these words, as they are the lament of simulator people from sea to shining sea. From Boston’s storied Ether Dome down to hurricane-battered Miami, across the fruited plain, up over the Rockies to LA’s smog, San Fran’s fog, and Seattle’s drizzle, the problem with simulators is always the same.
The lowest tech element in this high-tech world of computerized wizardry—scheduling the residents out of the OR and into the simulation lab
So the Simulator sits there, becoming a cobweb magnet in a dark room. A hundred scenarios, a thousand lessons huddle within the Simulator’s latex chest, but there they sit and there they stay, waiting for someone to rediscover them.
The obstacles to scheduling are quite daunting, involving two nontrivial components—time and money!
MONEY HEADACHES WITH SIMULATION SCHEDULING
• Say your program has CRNAs. If, at 7:30 on a Wednesday you are going to pull three residents out of the OR and send them to the simulator, by mathematical analysis, fast Fourrier transformation, quantitative numerometricologic integrative triangulatory derivativations, you will have to send, just a second, let me count on my fingers.
• Say your program is an “all-resident” program. Let’s fire up that computer again and see what we’ll need to do if we pull three residents out of the OR at 7:30 on a Wednesday. Miracle of miracles, that same number keeps appearing—three!