September 2025

Success of the pre-triage workshop during the JTR

At the Journée Technique Romande (JTR) for advanced medical posts, Xavier Good (Albasim) and Eric Golay (HUG) led a workshop based on our simulation of casualty pre-triage. Throughout the morning, five sessions brought together ten groups of participants from various backgrounds—doctors, nurses, midwives, paramedics, and first responders—to discover and test the pre-triage simulation.

 

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Despite limited learning time, the participants quickly took ownership of the simulation. Initially designed for individual use, the tool demonstrated its full potential in group work. The exchanges, debates, and comparison of viewpoints helped enrich the collective reflection on triage criteria, while revealing differences in reasoning across professions.

 

The experience also confirmed the complementarity between individual and collective use: the former promotes rigor and autonomy, while the latter develops critical perspective and richness of discussion. Together, they offer a complete pedagogical approach that is both stimulating and formative.

Given the interest generated and the number of participants, the tool is positioned as a promising resource for future training in disaster medicine and pre-hospital pre-triage.

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March 2025

Our PM-Game is featured in a Norwegian educational book

Our Project Management Game (PM-Game)is featured as an example and use case in the book ‘Practice-orientated and student-active learning: Labour market relevance and academic values in higher education’.

The chapter ‘Introducing practice in project management education: Can serious games bridge the gap between theory and practice?’ was written in collaboration between the University of Agder (Magnus Mikael Hellström, Knut Erik Bonnier, Aima Khan) and AlbaSim (Dominique Jaccard).

The book, in Norwegian, is published in open access.

March 2025

Our physiological model is published in the journal JMIR Formative Research

Our physiological model for simulating the temporal evolution of victims has been published in the journal JMIR Formative Research. This physiological model is used in simulations designed for training in the triage of victims, as well as for the medical management of major incidents.

Laurent, M., Jaccard, A., Suppan, L., Erriquez, E., Good, X., Golay, E., Jaccard, D., & Suppan, M. (2025). HUMAn, a Real-Time Evolutive Patient Model for Major Incident Simulation: Development and Validation Study. JMIR Formative Research

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