15 Expert Tips for Integrating AI with the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice™
If you work in healthcare simulation, you’re likely experiencing how technologies are rapidly changing the way you prepare your learners for practice. Artificial intelligence (AI) is now an important tool for simulation programs that seek to improve efficiency, realism, and scalability while maintaining educational quality.
When AI is intentionally aligned with the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice™, it becomes a valuable resource that strengthens simulation programs and supports educators in meeting growing demands. By offloading repetitive tasks, AI allows educators to dedicate more attention to critical teaching moments, reflective learning, and learner engagement.
Simulation programs are being asked to deliver more with fewer resources, as Jennifer Roye, EdD, MSN, RN, CHSE-A, CNE, PNAP, explained during a recent Simulation User Network (SUN) session.
"We are being asked to do more with less. We want to increase realism and fidelity, but we need some help. That’s where AI can reduce our burden and really increase our efficiency. As an instructor, facilitator, or educator, AI can really give some good tools to help you do your job."
Rather than treating AI as a standalone solution, Dr. Roye emphasized that it should be implemented within a trusted structure.
“The Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice give us a nice framework, a nice ‘skeleton’ to integrate AI for high-quality simulation,” she explained.
This article presents 15 expert tips drawn directly from her session. These tips explore how AI can enhance simulation design, facilitation, debriefing, and operations while remaining grounded in standards and professional integrity.
Before diving into the tips, read this one principle that applies to every example Dr. Roye shared:
“Everything that we’re saying about AI still has to have that human touch. AI should be used as an augmentation—not a substitute.”




“It’s beautiful for scheduling if you have a lot going on,” she said.
AI is already here, but Dr. Roye was clear that how you use it matters more than whether you use it at all. As she told the SUN audience:
“Don’t just use it because it’s cool!” she advised. “It is cool…but don’t just use it because it’s cool.”
Instead, she urged educators to slow down and stay grounded in purpose, standards, and accountability.
AI, she emphasized, should be used as “an enhancement or an augmentation to our educator capabilities,” not something you become dependent on.
That means protecting data privacy, avoiding overreliance, and making sure AI stays aligned with the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice. When that alignment is lost, she warned: “We need to step back and look at what we’re doing.”
Dr. Roye closed her session with a statement that captures the intent behind every example she shared:
"The future of simulation is not artificial intelligence alone. It is human expertise enhanced by intelligent tools."
Jennifer Roye, EdD, MSN, RN, CHSE-A, CNE, PNAP
Assistant Dean for Simulation and Technology and Clinical Assistant Professor
University of Texas at Arlington College of Nursing and Health Innovation

AI should be aligned with the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice™ and used to augment—not replace—educators. AI can assist with tasks such as scenario creation, needs assessment, and operations while educators maintain oversight.
AI can create learning objectives using Bloom’s taxonomy, produce multiple scenario variations for different learner levels and more.
Yes. As Dr. Jennifer Roye said: “AI is kind of like a co-debriefer.” AI can suggest reflective questions and identify psychological safety issues while ensuring human facilitation remains central.
AI can support strategic planning by analyzing program data, drafting policies and procedures, and managing complex scheduling to reduce administrative workload.