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Introduction: Pediatricians must navigate family dynamics, including addressing biases, while modeling appropriate behavior in front of a pediatric patient. We developed an adaptable anti-bias simulation workshop involving standardized participants (SP) as the biased parent of a pediatric manikin patient. Methods: The workshop was originally designed for pediatric residents, and was adapted for faculty and neonatology fellows. The 60-minute simulation workshop included 3 short, escalating cases of discriminatory behavior toward a member of the medical team. Biased behavior included overt racism and transphobia. The participants were required to develop a therapeutic alliance with the parent, de-escalate the situation, and model appropriate anti-biased behavior in front of an observant pediatric patient. After each simulation, learners debriefed with the facilitator, peers, and the SP. Program evaluation was conducted by anonymous pre- and postworkshop surveys. Results: < .001). Confidence to appropriately respond to discrimination improved after the simulation. The workshop is now integrated into residency annual education. Discussion: We implemented our upstander simulation workshop to train learners to address patients' families who direct discriminatory behavior toward health care team members. Strengths of the program included working with trained SPs and the inclusion of the pediatric manikin patient to reflect realistic clinical encounters.
Corbett et al. (Fri,) studied this question.