Generated by GPT-5-mini| Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center | |
|---|---|
| Name | Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center |
| Established | 2003 |
| Location | Baltimore, Maryland |
| Type | Medical simulation center |
| Parent | Johns Hopkins Medicine |
Johns Hopkins Medicine Simulation Center is an advanced clinical simulation facility affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine, located in Baltimore. The center supports immersive training for clinicians from institutions such as Johns Hopkins Hospital, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Bayview Medical Center, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and allied organizations including Cleveland Clinic and Mayo Clinic. It integrates simulation-based education used by professionals from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American College of Surgeons, American Heart Association, World Health Organization, and other leading institutions.
The center was founded in the early 2000s amid national initiatives like the Institute of Medicine report and partnerships with organizations such as Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation; it evolved alongside programs at Harvard Medical School, Stanford School of Medicine, University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, and University College London. Early collaborations involved simulation leaders from Society for Simulation in Healthcare, International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning, American Medical Association, National Institutes of Health, and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Over time, the center expanded through linkages with Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, Greater Baltimore Medical Center, and University of Maryland Medical Center.
The facility houses simulation suites modeled after environments found at Johns Hopkins Hospital, including operating rooms used by teams from Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University, emergency departments modeled with input from American College of Emergency Physicians, and neonatal units collaborating with American Academy of Pediatrics and Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine. Technology includes high-fidelity manikins from manufacturers used by Laerdal Medical, audio-visual debriefing systems compatible with standards from Society for Simulation in Healthcare, virtual reality platforms developed alongside researchers at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory and MIT Media Lab, and standardized patient programs linked with curricula at Yale School of Medicine and Columbia University Irving Medical Center. The center's simulation center infrastructure supports multidisciplinary exercises used by teams from Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Surgery Center, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Burn Unit, and specialty services represented by National Cancer Institute collaborators.
Programs serve learners from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, and trainees rotating from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and Mount Sinai Health System. Course offerings mirror guidelines from American Heart Association, American College of Surgeons, Society of Critical Care Medicine, Association of American Medical Colleges, and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The curriculum includes team-based training used in programs influenced by Crew Resource Management training histories with ties to NASA, Federal Aviation Administration, and simulation pedagogy practiced at Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine. Continuing medical education activities draw faculty who have lectured at Johns Hopkins Medicine International, Mayo Clinic School of Continuous Professional Development, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Research at the center intersects with investigators at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, National Institutes of Health, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and interdisciplinary teams from Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering and Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. Projects include studies on human factors inspired by work at NASA Ames Research Center, simulation efficacy comparable to trials published in journals associated with New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, and The Lancet, and technology development in collaboration with Microsoft Research, Google DeepMind, and IBM Research. The center contributes to multicenter trials with partners like Society for Simulation in Healthcare, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
Simulation exercises inform clinical protocols used by Johns Hopkins Hospital, influence safety initiatives endorsed by The Joint Commission, and support quality improvement projects aligned with Institute for Healthcare Improvement and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Outcomes research has paralleled work by teams at Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, and University of Pittsburgh Medical Center showing reductions in adverse events, improvements in team communication per frameworks from TeamSTEPPS, and enhanced preparedness for public health emergencies coordinated with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Federal Emergency Management Agency. The center's simulation-based checklists and protocols have been integrated into programs endorsed by American College of Surgeons and Society of Hospital Medicine.
The center maintains formal collaborations with international and national partners including World Health Organization, Pan American Health Organization, Médecins Sans Frontières, Red Cross, United States Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and academic partners at University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, Monash University, and University of Melbourne. Industry partnerships have involved Laerdal Medical, ZOLL Medical Corporation, Philips Healthcare, GE Healthcare, and technology firms such as Microsoft and Intel. Training collaborations extend to military, governmental, and humanitarian organizations including US Agency for International Development, United Nations, and specialty societies like American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and American Academy of Pediatrics.
Category:Johns Hopkins Medicine Category:Medical education Category:Simulation centers