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Simulation Meets NCLEX Readiness

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Sara Turkstra Jun 9, 2026 11:39:39 AM

Maya Reyes is a new virtual patient available to Spark and SimVox, and she arrives as part of something new: PCS.AI's first NCLEX Readiness Resource Set.


Who Is Maya Reyes?

Maya is a pregnant patient who arrives presenting with a constellation of serious symptoms: severe headache, blurry vision unrelieved by Tylenol, contractions every eight minutes lasting thirty seconds, and painful genital lesions. Fetal movement is reported as normal — but everything else about her presentation demands immediate, careful clinical attention.

For nursing students and healthcare learners, Maya is designed to be exactly the kind of case that sharpens clinical judgment.

Why Maya Matters for Simulation Programs

Maya's scenario is deliberately layered — not built around one issue, but several converging at once — requiring learners to assess, prioritize, differentiate, and act without losing sight of the patient in front of them. It's the kind of complexity modern healthcare demands, and that simulation programs are increasingly being asked to prepare learners for.

As the centerpiece of PCS.ai's NCLEX Readiness Resource Set, Maya's scenario is built to target all 8 NCLEX Next Generation competencies — from assessments and diagnostics to clinical decisions and documentation.
She's deployable on Spark and SimVox and fits into a range of program structures — from standalone skills labs to integrated NCLEX preparation curricula.

What the Simulation Experience Looks Like

Learners who step into a session with Maya move through a structured workflow built around doing, not just watching:

  • Phase 1 — Assessment: Learners gather vitals via sensors, conduct a verbal health assessment, and perform a physical examination. Maya responds dynamically — her answers, reactions, and behaviors reflect the complexity of her real clinical picture.
  • Phase 2 — Diagnose & Treat: With findings in hand, learners review diagnostics, select a correct diagnosis, and choose appropriate interventions. This is where clinical reasoning gets stress-tested.
  • Phase 3 — Quiz & Debrief: An NCLEX-style quiz closes the learning loop, with full answer walkthroughs that explain both correct and incorrect responses. Learners don't just find out if they were right (or wrong) — they understand why.
  • Optional — Documentation: For programs that want to extend the learning, learners can complete SBAR communication, SOAP notes, and provider handoff documentation.

Structure That Supports the Learning

What makes Maya's simulation feel different isn't just the clinical complexity — it's the structure around it. Every debrief includes rationale for both correct and incorrect answer choices. Questions are organized by diagnosis, nursing interventions, and complications. And learner performance is tracked throughout, giving educators the data they need to identify gaps and guide growth.

The Bigger Picture

Maya Reyes is part of PCS.ai's NCLEX Readiness Resource Set — a growing library of simulation-enhanced cases designed to reflect modern clinical judgment, prioritization, and real-world decision-making. She represents PCS.ai's commitment to building virtual patients that don't simplify care — they simulate it.

Learn more about Maya Reyes and the PCS.ai NCLEX Resource Set at www.pcs.ai.

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