SubmissionId 60817

Accepted Type
Oral

Code
OA1-3-3

Was this work accepted for CCME 2020?
yes

Category
General Call (Workshop, Oral Presentation, Poster Presentation)

Type
Oral

Sub Type
Education Research

Will the presenter be a:
Graduate Student

Affiliation

Considered for Poster
no

Title
The invisible work of Cadaver Based Simulation: An ethnography

Length of Presentation

Background/Purpose
Cadaver Based Simulation (CBS) is on the rise in Canada, due to recent advances in cadaveric preservation. However, the CBS literature tends to focus on perceptions of CBS and procedural performance. The complex work involved in CBS, particularly the invisible work of clinical cadaver staff, is little understood. This presentation therefore examines how cadavers, learners, workers, tools and spaces come together in a clinical cadaver program and offers implications for wider processes and discourses of simulation learning.

Methods
Our ethnographic methods (observation [n=30 hours], interview [n=30], document analysis [n=22]) allowed us to follow the cadaver before educational use (cadaver preparation), during (learning sessions with physicians, residents), and after (memorial service) over a two-year period (2018-2020) at Dalhousie University.

Results
Our analysis identified a complex work and educational "life cycle" of the cadaver, from its entrance into the body donation program through to burial and interment. This cycle is characterized by a series of transitions as cadavers pass through the hands of multiple actors. Some of these shifts were obvious (e.g., passing the threshold between home/hospital and morgue) and others were subtle, rapid, and constantly changing (e.g., moving between person and tool).

Conclusion
Cadavers require a complex system of invisible work processes within and beyond the classroom. CBS requires workers and learners to navigate the tension between treating the body as an anonymous educational tool and as a specific, whole person. Better understanding this nuanced process may inform how we use cadavers in medical education.

Keyword 1
Simulation

Keyword 2
cadavers

Keyword 3
ethnography

Level of Training
Post Graduate

Abstract Themes
Postgraduate

Additional Theme (First choice)
Continuing Medical Education

Additional Theme (Second Choice)

Additional Theme (Third Choice)

Authors
Presenter
    Victoria Luong

Term 1
Yes

Term 2
Yes

Term 3
Yes

Term 4
Yes

Term 5
Yes
x

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