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Mobile »in-situ«-Simulation – »Train where you work«

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Zusammenfassung

Der technologische Fortschritt der Simulationshersteller hat es in den letzten Jahren zunehmend einfacher gemacht, die realitätsnahe Simulation auch außerhalb von fest aufgebauten Simulationszentren durchzuführen. Der erste realitätsnahe Simulator »SimOne « aus dem Jahr 1961 hat mehrere Räume gefüllt und hatte eine Vielzahl von schweren Computern und Maschinen konnektiert, so dass eine mobile Simulation allein schon aufgrund der Technologie unmöglich gewesen wäre (► Kap. 25; [1], [5]). Aber auch die Nachfolgegeneration in den 80er und 90er Jahren waren noch sehr große Simulatoren, die mit schweren, außerhalb der Patientenpuppe aufgestellten Gerätetürmen mit Simulationstechnik verbunden waren, so dass ein Transport dieser Simulatoren nur mit großem Aufwand und großen Transportgeräten möglich war. Seit Einführung der kompakten Simulatoren, die anfänglich bis auf die Druckluft und die Computersteuerung im Wesentlichen alle Aggregate innerhalb der Simulationspuppe integriert hatten, war es möglich, die Simulation mit vertretbarem Aufwand mobil anzubieten. Inzwischen werden Simulatoren angeboten, die gänzlich ohne Kabelverbindungen auskommen (Funksteuerung , Druckluft und Flüssigkeit im Mannequin gespeichert).

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Rall, M. (2013). Mobile »in-situ«-Simulation – »Train where you work«. In: St.Pierre, M., Breuer, G. (eds) Simulation in der Medizin. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29436-5_17

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29436-5_17

  • Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg

  • Print ISBN: 978-3-642-29435-8

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