A structured clinical simulation for Massive Transfusion Protocol training — built for ICU, OB, OR, ED, and Observation/Med-Surg teams.
🏥 ICU Scenario🤱 OB Scenario🔪 OR Scenario🚑 ED Scenario🏥 Observation / Med-Surg📱 Live + Self-Guided
About this simulation
This is a tabletop simulation — a structured discussion-based exercise that walks your team through a Massive Transfusion Protocol event from initial trigger to discontinuation. No mannequins, no skills lab. Just your team, a scenario, and either a facilitator or the built-in self-run guide.
In live sessions, the scenario narrative and Learn screens are displayed on a shared screen. Participants answer structured questions on their phones, and the facilitator sees responses in real time, guides discussion, and closes the loop before advancing.
The self-guided options run entirely on your own — no facilitator, no server, no connection required. Use the full learning module when you need the MTP process taught first, or use the scenario practice links for quick department-specific rehearsal.
Choose your mode
🎛️
For educators & charge nurses
I'm running a group session
The simplified v2 facilitator flow: choose a scenario, create a room, project the group screen, and advance through commit-then-reveal prompts with optional read-aloud.
No educator required. Choose a scenario, show one shared screen, optionally let nurses join by phone, and use built-in discussion cues, answer-key reveals, audio injects, and recap.
Your facilitator has a 4-letter room code. Enter it below or scan the QR code on the projected screen to join on your phone or computer.
Room code from your facilitator
🧑💻
For quick department practice
I want scenario-only practice
No facilitator needed. Choose a department and work through the scenario at your own pace. Best for refreshers, make-up practice, or reviewing a specific unit workflow.
Teaches the shared MTP workflow first, then uses ordering, matching, guided audio, and decision checks across the department scenarios. This is the most complete independent-learning version.
1Open the group facilitator v2 screen and choose the department scenario.
2Create the room, then open the projector screen on the room display.
3Participants may scan the QR code, but phones are optional for discussion-only sessions.
4Advance one button at a time: scenario prompt, group commitment, expected actions, next phase, debrief.
📱 Joining as a participant
1Get the 4-letter room code from your facilitator (also on the projected screen).
2Enter the code on the join page or scan the QR code. Add your name or role if you'd like.
3Wait for the facilitator to start. Each group prompt appears as the scenario advances.
4Type a short response when asked, then compare with the expected actions during the reveal.
Available scenarios
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ICU Scenario
Adult critical care massive transfusion scenario for ICU teams. Focuses on recognition, activation, coordination, product administration, and discontinuation.
● Live
🤱
OB Scenario
Obstetric massive hemorrhage scenario for postpartum teams. Focuses on recognition, escalation, role clarity, and department-specific MTP workflow.
● Live
🔪
OR Scenario
Operating room MTP scenario centered on perioperative coordination, documentation, communication, and transfer of care.
● Live
🚨
ED Scenario
Emergency department trauma MTP scenario — crush chest injury with pre-arrival notification, chest tube bleeding, emergency-release blood workflow, cooler paperwork, and transfer to Strong.
● Live
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Observation / Med-Surg Scenario
Observation or Med-Surg unit scenario — recognizing hemorrhagic shock, activating the Rapid Response Team (x6666), SBAR handoff, and supporting the RRT through MTP escalation and transfer to OR for source control.
● Live
Policy reference: This simulation is designed to support Thompson Health policy CC.03.004 — Clinical Practice Guideline: Massive Transfusion Process for Adult Patient. All clinical content reflects Thompson-specific workflows, equipment, and contact information (Blood Bank x6544). This is a training tool — always refer to the current policy for clinical decisions.