Follow us

RSS feedRSS feed for this siteSubscribe to our RSS feed. What is a RSS feed?

TwitterTwitter feed for this siteFollow @PIEteam on Twitter.

Recent updates

Nov 21, 2019

The HTML5 version of the VIC Player has been completed, and the cases on the VIC website have been converted to use the HTML5 Player.

Sep 6, 2018

Ten Obstetric Medicine cases have been published on the VIC website.

Jan 18, 2018

Six Rheumatology cases have been published on the VIC website.

Sep 18, 2017

Twenty two Nurse Practitioner cases have been published on the VIC website.

June 27, 2017

Sixteen additional Pharmacy cases have been published on the VIC website.

May 5, 2017

Four Pharmacy cases Pharmacy cases have been published on the VIC website.

April 12, 2013

A new Template Case has been launched.

May 1, 2012

A new Anesthesia Case has been launched. Additionally, Widgets have been developed for the VIC Player.

March 14, 2012

PIE's Virtual Interactive Case System was used to create the winner of the AFMC/Infoway Virtual Patient Challenge.

October 5, 2011

The VIRTUAL Interactive Case System website has been launched with one Template Case.

Content

Welcome

Welcome to the Virtual Interactive Case (VIC) system for creating simulations of encounters with patients in clinics. VIC cases are clinical reasoning exercises with feedback. Their role is to provide a bridge between theory and seeing patients in clinic (or ER), providing students with what Ericsson has called "deliberate practice" as a way of gaining clinical expertise. The strength of VIC is that it is optimized for rapidly creating a large number of cases, by using a patient template, and creating variations of cases with different differential diagnoses for the same presenting complaint.

HTML5 version of the VIC Player launched

The VIC cases on this website have been converted to use the HTML5 version of the VIC Player. This means VIC cases no longer require Adobe Flash. The HTML5 VIC Player works with all currently supported versions of web browsers on desktop or laptop computers and on tablets. Although not yet optimized for smartphones, it can be used in the landscape orientation with a bit of scrolling.


VIC Obstetric Medicine cases launched

Ten Obstetric Medicine VIC cases have developed for residents of the General Internal Medicine program at University of Toronto. They have been published on the Obstetric Medicine section of the VIC website.


VIC Nurse Practitioner cases launched

Examples of 22 VIC cases developed for the Nurse Practitioner Program in the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing have been published on the VIC for Nurse Practitioner Program section of the VIC website.


VIC Pharmacy cases launched

Examples of 27 VIC cases developed by members of the Pharmacy Department at UHN have been published on the VIC for Pharmacy section of the VIC website. These cases are intended to enhance the teaching of students from the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Toronto.


VIC Rheumatology cases launched

Examples of 6 VIC cases developed by Dr. Linda Zhou and Dr. Shirley Lake from Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre have been published on the Rheumatology Cases section of the VIC website. These cases are intended to enhance the teaching of residents in the Rheumatology program at the University of Toronto.


Diagnostic problems

Virtual interactive cases are diagnostic problems in which a user can gather the information needed to determine the correct diagnosis by conducting all the investigations they would normally carry out in the clinic (history taking, physical exam, etc.) to rule in or rule out the diagnosis.

Debriefing

Feedback is provided at the end of the case in a debriefing listing the actions they took that were essential, the essential actions they missed, the actions that were inappropriate, and actions that were taken in an incorrect order. A score is also provided reflecting their success in this exercise, along with the time and cost incurred in arriving at the diagnosis.

Case development

The VIC system is designed to facilitate rapid case development. Case development begins with template of all the investigations that can be carried out, with the results for a normal person with no clinical problem. Cases can then be created by substituting abnormal findings at appropriate places in the template, and adding feedback for the debriefing for these actions.