ObjectiveEffective communication minimizes medical errors and leads to improved team performance while treating critically ill patients. Closed-loop communication is routinely applied in high-risk industries but remains underutilized in healthcare. Simulation serves as an educational tool to introduce, practice, and appreciate the efficacy of closed-loop communication.MethodsThis observational before-and-after study investigates behavioral changes in communication among nurses brought on by simulation team training in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). The communication patterns of PICU nurses, who had no prior simulation experience, were observed during routine bedside care before and after undergoing in situ simulation.One month before and 1 and 3 months after simulation (intervention), 2 trained raters recorded nurse communications relative to callouts, uttered by the sender, and callbacks, reciprocated by the recipient. The impact of simulation on communication patterns was analyzed quantitatively.ResultsAmong the 15 PICU nurses included in this study, significant changes in communication behavior were observed during patient care after communication-focused in situ simulation. The PICU nurses were significantly less likely to let a callout go unanswered during clinical routine. The effect prevailed both 1 month (P = 0.039) and 3 months (P = 0.033) after the educational exposure.ConclusionsThis observational before-and-after study describes the prevalence and pattern of communication among PICU nurses during routine patient care and documents PICU nurses transferring simulation-acquired communication skills into their clinical environment after a single afternoon of in situ simulation. This successful transfer of simulation-acquired skills has the potential to improve patient safety and outcome.