Medical Emergency During Flight: A Team-Building Exercise

This educational activity is a facilitated, team-based learning exercise designed to simulate decision-making during an in-flight medical emergency. Participants individually and collaboratively prioritize the usefulness of medical kit items based on a clinical scenario involving a passenger with acute symptoms. The activity emphasizes team dynamics rather than clinical accuracy alone, with structured comparison of individual and group decisions against expert rankings. A guided debrief focuses on communication patterns, leadership emergence, participation, conflict management, and decision-making strategies within small groups. The exercise is commonly used as an icebreaker, energizer, or team development intervention in medical education settings.

Target Learners 

This activity is appropriate for: 

  • Clinically experienced medical students 
  • Residents 
  • Fellows 
  • Faculty physicians across multiple specialties 

Note: The activity is not recommended for anesthetists due to differences in pharmacologic approaches that may influence ranking decisions within the exercise. 

Equipment / Materials Needed 

To conduct the activity, the facilitator will require: 

  • Copies of the Medical Emergency During Flight handout (double-sided; one per participant) 
  • Facilitator’s Guide (for expert rankings and instructions) 
  • Educational Summary Report 
  • Writing utensils for participants 
  • Evaluation Form (for post-activity assessment) 

Estimated Time to Complete 

Total activity time: ~40 minutes, including: 

  • ~5 minutes: Individual item ranking 
  • ~20 minutes: Group/team ranking 
  • ~15 minutes: Expert comparison, scoring, and facilitated debrief 

Actual duration may vary depending on the depth of discussion during the debriefing phase. 

 

Categories: MedEdPortal, Open Access, Peer Review
Tags: Aerospace, Clinicians
Author: Jeff Pettit, Kristi J. Ferguson