Upstate Medical University opens new simulation center

A patient manikin in a bed that students at Upstate Medical University will work with at the facility’s new simulation center in Weiskotten Hall. (ERIC REINHARDT / BJNN)

SYRACUSE — Doctors and those studying to become doctors absorb a lot of information from books and journals, but it doesn’t always translate into good patient care because “we have to put what we learned into action,” says Dr. Erik Rufa, director of education at the new simulation center at Upstate Medical University.  “That’s not […]

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SYRACUSE — Doctors and those studying to become doctors absorb a lot of information from books and journals, but it doesn’t always translate into good patient care because “we have to put what we learned into action,” says Dr. Erik Rufa, director of education at the new simulation center at Upstate Medical University. 

“That’s not always easy. We don’t want to practice on real humans because that could be a safety issue,” says Rufa, who is also an internal-medicine physician.

That’s the purpose behind the medical school’s new simulation center and the programmed manikins that act as patients for the medical students. The manikins help the students to “bridge” the book knowledge with the bedside care, according to Rufa. 

“Whether it be a procedure like a spinal tap or an intubation, putting a tube down someone’s trachea, or whether it be responding to a patient emergency like an anaphylactic-shock patient who was exposed to like peanuts or a medication they were allergic to,” says Rufa. He spoke with CNYBJ on Sept. 19 before Upstate Medical University formally opened a new $11 million teaching center that will simulate real-time responses to medical emergencies.

They could include incidents in a hospital’s intensive-care unit, labor and delivery areas, the operating room, or any setting where health care is delivered.

The medical school wants the Upstate Simulation Center to “improve patients safety and patient care, as well as build highly trained multidisciplinary health-care teams,” per a news release.

The 8,600-square-foot facility will become a “hub of teaching and training” for students from all areas of the health professions, Upstate contends. 

“The Upstate Simulation Center exemplifies our mission and vision to improve the health of our communities through education, biomedical research and health care and to create a healthier world for all,” Dr. Mantosh Dewan, interim president of Upstate Medical University, said in Upstate’s news release. “This special space provides Upstate with the ability to enhance the training of our students and our region’s health care professionals by addressing real-life patient care scenarios through advanced technology, while providing us with the ability to offer immediate feedback on how to best manage patient care scenarios that are faced every day.”

A SUNY 2020 Challenge Grant provided the funding for the Upstate Simulation Center. Murnane Building Contractors of DeWitt handled the construction on the project, while Glastonbury, Connecticut–based SLAM, which has an office in Syracuse, was the project architect, Upstate said. 

Simulation center details

The center, which is located on the lower level of Weiskotten Hall, features a simulated operating room; six simulated acute-care rooms with headwalls which can be “flexed” for additional configurations like intensive care units or outpatient rooms; two 16-person skills and task training rooms which can be de-partitioned to accommodate up to 32 students; a haptics training room; dedicated administrative offices and workspaces to support the center; and the required storage area for all equipment and supplies. It also has four control rooms so that multiple rooms can be used at once or in sequence as well as observational windows.

The patients in the simulation center are eight high-tech manikins that can be programmed to reflect a seemingly endless range of medical complications. They can have convulsions, breathing difficulties, pharyngeal swelling, cardiac issues or another warning sign or symptom that future doctors might face in a real patients

“These manikins are about as life-like as one can get,” Erin Graham, manager of simulation services, said in Upstate’s news release. “They allow us to set specific scenarios, while providing for the safest training of learners.”                       

Eric Reinhardt: