Escape rooms offer pharmacy students innovative learning experience

By Alex Branch

Phar Web

Escape rooms, the popular adventure game where people solve puzzles to escape a locked area, are good for testing mental strength under pressure.

Turns out, they’re also good for learning how to be a pharmacist.

UNT Health Science Center 2nd-year pharmacy students completed an innovative learning experience in the form of “escape rooms” created by two UNT System College of Pharmacy faculty members.

Cheng Yuet, PharmD, and Brittany N. Palasik, PharmD, crafted the exercise as a unique way to practice collaboration in situations their students will face as future health care providers.

In this case, the two “escape rooms” were a hospital room and an outpatient clinical room. To escape, students worked in teams to solve puzzles related to the management of a patient with diabetes.

To solve the puzzles, students used the tools found in the rooms — a patient bed, an intravenous drip pole, a vial of potassium and more.

Just as in a busy hospital, time was limited. Students only had 20 minutes to escape each room.

“It brought us a lot closer to understanding the real-life experiences we’ll face as pharmacists,” said Frank Ssentamu, a 2nd-year pharmacy student. “The most important thing I learned was how to work together quickly as one team with the common goal of caring for the patient.

“If you don’t listen attentively and communicate clearly, you can’t take care of the patient effectively.”

The escape rooms were an example of the mindset of innovation that UNTHSC brings to learning. The activities were held in the Patient Safety Room in the Interdisciplinary Research and Education Building, a five-story, 173,000-square-foot facility that opened in 2018.

The puzzles required students to manage a patient through a transition of care, from the emergency room to a hospital bed, or from an outpatient clinic to their home.

“The introduction of transitions-of-care in a didactic setting has not been well-studied in pharmacy literature, so we hope to address a gap at our institution,” Dr. Yuet said.

Students found their puzzles to solve in a lockbox. To complete them, students had to calculate medication and fluid amounts, identify criteria needed to transfer a patient and provide clear and correct prescriptions for patients to follow.

“They experience real-life problems — patients not taking their medications properly, breakdowns in communication between hospital floors and between providers,” Dr. Palasik said. “This felt like a creative way to prepare them to solve those problems.”

Recent News

Amb Pinning 4565
  • Our People
|Apr 29, 2024

Office of Admissions & Recruitment hosts third Annual Student Ambassador Pinning Ceremony

Countless hours of service, juggling class work, jobs and sharing the story of The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth were celebrated on April 18 at the third annual Student Ambassador Pinning Ceremony. Each year, the Office of Admissions and Recruitment hosts a pinning ce...
Img 9308
  • Our People
|Apr 29, 2024

TCOM chapter of Gold Humanism Honor Society welcomes new members

The humanistic side of medicine is continuing to flourish at the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth. The TCOM chapter of the Arnold P. Gold Foundation inducted 33 students and four faculty members into the Gold Humanism Honor So...
4ce85696 80cc 4bc6 B20b 8e48bc261e0a
  • Our People
|Apr 26, 2024

College of Pharmacy students land dream fellowships

Rachel Clark, Sulin Kamt, Haley McKeefer and Elise Vo might be nearing the end of their time at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s UNT System College of Pharmacy, but their time learning what the pharmaceutical industry has to offer is far from over. After graduati...
Dharamsi Cropped
  • Our People
|Apr 26, 2024

HSC School of Public Health Climbs in U.S. News & World Report Rankings

The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s School of Public Health is climbing the ranks in the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings of public health schools. SPH jumped four spots in this year’s rankings to number 88. This rise in the rankings reflects SPH's ...