#22 The DR5 Model episode artwork

EPISODE · May 10, 2021 · 1H 22M

#22 The DR5 Model

from Teamcast

The DR5 modelIn this episode, Dr. Zab Johnson, Dr. Al’ai Alvarez, and Dr Preston Cline will break down the DR5 model using a Trauma Resuscitation scenario.The DR5 represents the latest version of the original MCTI Learning Diagnostic Tool (The LERP and then the DR4) that was developed through a collaborative inquiry process between the Mission Critical Team Institute, Naval Special Warfare, and the Wharton Neuroscience Initiative (UPENN), to improve the training for hostage rescue teams. This version was specifically developed for use in medical resuscitation. As always, it is designed as a tool to help Instructor Cadre improve performance within immersion events and is currently being utilized by teams worldwide. Initially created to move past the all too common “You Suck! Suck Less!” instructor/student interaction by providing instructors a more precise language to overcome the Tacit Knowledge Transfer Problem [1]. This is the problem that experts face when trying to explain or articulate their expertise (e.g., Having the skill to ride a bike versus explaining that skill to another). Using research from Psychology, Education, and Neuroscience, the DR5 model breaks down the immersion event into 5 distinct areas of Detection, Recognition, Reaction, Response, Reset, and Reflection. While neurologically, these stages do not behave sequentially [2], the model provides Instructor Cadres a mechanism for specificity [3] to diagnose better and mediate learning within and after immersion events.Guests:Dr. Elizabeth (Zab) JohnsonExecutive Director, Wharton Neuroscience InitiativeSenior Fellow, Wharton Neuroscience InitiativeElizabeth (Zab) Johnson is the executive director and senior fellow of the Wharton Neuroscience Initiative. Her research focuses on vision and visual behavior. Her work spans physiological approaches in the retina and early visual cortex to using eye tracking to investigate how human observers look and navigate through the world, how these processes unfold over time and with experience, and the role of social cognition and decision making in these processes. She is an expert on color vision. She received her PhD in Neural Science at New York University. Al'ai Alvarez, MD, FACEP, FAAEM (@alvarezzzy)Assistant Residency Program Director, Emergency MedicineClinical Assistant Professor - Co-Chair, WellMD Physician Wellness ForumStanford University School of MedicineAl'ai is a clinical assistant professor of Emergency Medicine (EM) and an associate residency program director (APD) at the Stanford Emergency Medicine Residency Program. He is the APD for Residency Process Improvement (Quality and Clinical Operations), Recruitment (Diversity), and Well-being (Inclusion). Dr. Alvarez focuses on the intersectionality and interdependence of wellbeing with performance improvement on patient experience, quality and patient safety, diversity, equity and inclusion, and medical education.Additional ArticlesDR5 ModelHigh Performance Resuscitation Teams

NOW PLAYING

#22 The DR5 Model

0:00 1:22:38

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

episode 3

Feb 17, 2011 ·47m

Explicit
episode 2

Jan 30, 2011 ·47m

Explicit
episode 1

Jan 23, 2011 ·47m

Explicit

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Teamcast?

This episode is 1 hour and 22 minutes long.

When was this Teamcast episode published?

This episode was published on May 10, 2021.

What is this episode about?

The DR5 modelIn this episode, Dr. Zab Johnson, Dr. Al’ai Alvarez, and Dr Preston Cline will break down the DR5 model using a Trauma Resuscitation scenario.The DR5 represents the latest version of the original MCTI Learning Diagnostic Tool (The LERP...

Can I download this Teamcast episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!