David Payne: Playing the sepsis game "SEPTRIS" educational game| BMJ Ovarian Cancer and Us OVARIAN CANCER and US Ovarian Cancer and Us

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Friday, March 16, 2012

David Payne: Playing the sepsis game "SEPTRIS" educational game| BMJ



David Payne: Playing the sepsis game | BMJ

There are 1.1m cases of sepsis each year in the US, costing $17bn to treat and accounting for 17% of hospital mortality.

Doctors at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California wanted to help their fellow physicians to recognise and treat it, but instead of producing a paper or video, devised a game.


Septris is a case–based interactive tool that shows up to eight patients’ avatar slowly descending a screen as their condition deteriorates. You can download it here. There is also a YouTube demo.

If a doctor decides on an appropriate course of action, the avatar bumps up the page, ultimately ending at the top if their life is saved.
Lisa Shieh, medical director for quality at Stanford, told delegates attending the spring conference of HighWire Press, the university’s web hosting service for scholarly publishers: “Doctors are inherently competitive and we wanted something challenging that doctors can play anytime, with bonus points for saving lives.”

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