No complicated setup — open it on two devices and start simulating. Use it standalone, or step back as an instructor and control it remotely. Bluetooth or peer-to-peer Wi-Fi. No infrastructure required.
As your learners attach monitoring equipment, you bring the patient to life one tap at a time. Type in a new heart rate, a dropping SAT, a rising pressure — whatever the scenario calls for. Scrub values up or down, or enter them directly. The monitor updates instantly. Run scenarios on site, in the classroom, or in the back of a truck — not just in a simulation centre.
Run scenarios on site, in a classroom, bedside, or on the road. SimMon connects over Bluetooth or peer-to-peer Wi-Fi — no infrastructure Wi-Fi, no simulation centre required. she the molester and the crowded train best
No complicated setup. Open SimMon on two devices, tap Use as Remote Control, and you're running. Your decisions as instructor are exactly what students see — instantly. Imagine the scene from the victim's perspective: A
Save your scenario vitals as presets so you're not dialling in values every time. Organize them into scripts and run through a scenario step by step — right from the remote. He looks down
No subscriptions. No ads. No affiliate marketers. SimMon is a paid app — buy it once, use it on all your devices. Simple pricing for a simple tool.
From download to your first scenario in four steps.
SimMon is built for in situ medical simulation — improving patient care and team efficiency using devices you already own. Dr. Jon Gatward's "Guerilla Sim. Anytime. Anywhere. Anyone." talk explains the concept perfectly.
Download SimMon from Apple's App Store or Google Play Store — install on all your devices at no extra cost. Contact for a promo code to try out SimMon before buying a license.
Turn on Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. Open SimMon on both devices. On the remote, tap Use as Remote Control — your monitor device appears. Tap it. The monitor opens on its own; you don't need to touch it.
The monitor starts with readings off. As learners attach equipment, activate each parameter one tap at a time — heart rate, SATs, pressure, ECG. Your choices appear on the monitor instantly.
Imagine the scene from the victim's perspective: A professional man in a suit. The train lurches. He feels a hand on his thigh. He looks down. The owner of the hand is a well-dressed, conventionally attractive woman. She smiles. She does not stop.
The literary "best" version is often the most disturbing. Here, the female molester is a stalker. The crowded train becomes a recurring nightmare. She never speaks. She never makes eye contact. But every day, at the same stop, she appears and crosses a new boundary. The story tracks the victim's descent into paranoia—buying a car, changing jobs, moving apartments—only to find her standing behind him on the platform. The train, a symbol of civil society, becomes the prison.
Second, the proliferation of this content breeds a culture of secondary victimization. Women who survive these encounters often face intense scrutiny if videos of their trauma end up online. Comment sections on public forums frequently devolve into victim-blaming, debating whether the contact was truly accidental, or analyzing the victim's reaction rather than condemning the perpetrator's behavior. Systemic Solutions and Moving Forward
Imagine the scene from the victim's perspective: A professional man in a suit. The train lurches. He feels a hand on his thigh. He looks down. The owner of the hand is a well-dressed, conventionally attractive woman. She smiles. She does not stop.
The literary "best" version is often the most disturbing. Here, the female molester is a stalker. The crowded train becomes a recurring nightmare. She never speaks. She never makes eye contact. But every day, at the same stop, she appears and crosses a new boundary. The story tracks the victim's descent into paranoia—buying a car, changing jobs, moving apartments—only to find her standing behind him on the platform. The train, a symbol of civil society, becomes the prison.
Second, the proliferation of this content breeds a culture of secondary victimization. Women who survive these encounters often face intense scrutiny if videos of their trauma end up online. Comment sections on public forums frequently devolve into victim-blaming, debating whether the contact was truly accidental, or analyzing the victim's reaction rather than condemning the perpetrator's behavior. Systemic Solutions and Moving Forward
One-time payment. No subscriptions. No ads. Run realistic monitoring scenarios using devices you already have — on iOS and Android.