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1.
Clin Teach ; 21(1): e13666, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37874078

ABSTRACT

The Incubator for Clinical Education Research (ClinEdR) is a UK-wide network, established with support from the National Institute for Health Research, to lead initiatives to build capacity in the field. A key barrier identified by this group is that many experienced educators, clinicians, and researchers, who may be committed to supporting others, have little guidance on how best to do this. In this "How to …" paper, we draw on relevant literature and our individual and collective experiences as members of the National Institute for Health Research ClinEdR incubator to offer suggestions on how educators can support others to develop successful careers involving ClinEdR. This article offers guidance and inspiration for all professionals whose role involves research and scholarship and who encounter aspiring or developing clinical education researchers in the course of their work. It will also be of interest to researchers who are starting out and progressing in the field.


Subject(s)
Fellowships and Scholarships , Research Personnel , Humans
2.
Clin Teach ; 20(4): e13608, 2023 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37503772
5.
Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed ; 108(2): 91-95, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34857651

ABSTRACT

This article suggests communicative steps and strategies to help healthcare professionals achieve the ideals of child-centred care, which place children and young people at the centre of policy and practice. For those with 15 s, not 15 min, our suggestions can be summarised like this: help children be active agents in their own care by asking, listening well, being curious and explaining things clearly in an accessible but not condescending way.


Subject(s)
Child Health , Referral and Consultation , Humans , Child , Adolescent , Communication , Health Personnel
7.
Med Teach ; 44(12): 1385-1391, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35820063

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Prescribing is a common task, often performed by junior clinicians, with potential for significant harm. Despite this, it is common for medical students to qualify having only prescribed in simulated scenarios or assessments. We implemented an alternative: students were given pens with purple ink, which permitted them to write prescriptions for real patients. We set out to understand how this intervention, pre-prescribing, created a zone of proximal development (ZPD) for learners. METHODS: An anonymous, mixed methods, evaluation questionnaire was distributed to all final-year medical students at one university in the United Kingdom. Analysis was guided by Experience Based Learning theory. RESULTS: Two hundred and eighteen students made 386 free-text comments. Most participants reported that pre- helped them become capable doctors (Strongly Agree n = 96, 45%; Agree: n = 110, 50%). Pre-prescribing created a ZPD in which participants could use the tools of practice in authentic contexts under conditions that made it safe to fail. CONCLUSIONS: This research shows how a theoretically informed intervention can create conditions to enhance learning. It encourages educators to identify aspects of routine practice that could be delegated, or co-performed, by learners. With appropriate support, educators can create 'safe-fails' which allow learners to participate safely in authentic, risky, and indeterminate situations they will be expected to navigate as newly qualified clinicians.


Subject(s)
Physicians , Students, Medical , Humans , Clinical Competence , Learning , United Kingdom
8.
Clin Teach ; 19(3): 257-259, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35347858
11.
Med Teach ; 43(12): 1419-1429, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34372748

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The hope that reliably testing clinicians' competencies would improve patient safety is unfulfilled and clinicians' psychosocial safety is deteriorating. Our purpose was to conceptualise 'mutual safety', which could increase benefit as well as reduce harm. METHODS: A cultural-historical analysis of how medical education has positioned the patient as an object of benefit guided implementation research into how mutual safety could be achieved. RESULTS: Educating doctors to abide by moral principles and use rigorous habits of mind and scientific technologies made medicine a profession. Doctors' complex attributes addressed patients' complex diseases and personal circumstances, from which doctors benefited too. The patient safety movement drove reforms, which reorientated medical education from complexity to simplicity: clinicians' competencies should be standardised and measurable, and clinicians whose 'incompetence' caused harm remediated. Applying simple standards to an increasingly complex, and therefore inescapably risky, practice could, however, explain clinicians' declining psychosocial health. We conducted a formative intervention to examine how 'acting wisely' could help clinicians benefit patients amidst complexity. We chose the everyday task of insulin therapy, where benefit and harm are precariously balanced. 247 students, doctors, and pharmacists used a thought tool to plan how best to perform this risky task, given their current clinical capabilities, and in the sometimes-hostile clinical milieus where they practised. Analysis of 1000 commitments to behaviour change and 600 learning points showed that addressing complexity called for a skills-set that defied standardisation. Clinicians gained confidence, intrinsic motivation, satisfaction, capability, and a sense of legitimacy from finding new ways of benefiting patients. CONCLUSION: Medical education needs urgently to acknowledge the complexity of practice and synergise doctors' and patients' safety. We have shown how this is possible.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical , Physicians , Humans , Learning , Patient Safety
12.
BMJ Open ; 11(7): e054368, 2021 07 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34244289

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Explore children's and adolescents' (CADs') lived experiences of healthcare professionals (HCPs). DESIGN: Scoping review methodology provided a six-step framework to, first, identify and organise existing evidence. Interpretive phenomenology provided methodological principles for, second, an interpretive synthesis of the life worlds of CADs receiving healthcare, as represented by verbatim accounts of their experiences. DATA SOURCES: Five key databases (Ovid Medline, Embase, Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) Plus, and Web of Science), from inception through to January 2019, reference lists, and opportunistically identified publications. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Research articles containing direct first-person quotations by CADs (aged 0-18 years inclusive) describing how they experienced HCPs. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Tabulation of study characteristics, contextual information, and verbatim extraction of all 'relevant' (as defined above) direct quotations. Analysis of basic scope of the evidence base. The research team worked reflexively and collaboratively to interpret the qualitative data and construct a synthesis of children's experiences. To consolidate and elaborate the interpretation, we held two focus groups with inpatient CADs in a children's hospital. RESULTS: 669 quotations from 99 studies described CADs' experiences of HCPs. Favourable experiences were of forming trusting relationships and being involved in healthcare discussions and decisions; less favourable experiences were of not relating to or being unable to trust HCPs and/or being excluded from conversations about them. HCPs fostered trusting relationships by being personable, wise, sincere and relatable. HCPs made CADs feel involved by including them in conversations, explaining medical information, and listening to CADs' wider needs and preferences. CONCLUSION: These findings strengthen the case for making CADs partners in healthcare despite their youth. We propose that a criterion for high-quality child-centred healthcare should be that HCPs communicate in ways that engender trust and involvement.


Subject(s)
Health Facilities , Health Personnel , Adolescent , Communication , Delivery of Health Care , Humans , Qualitative Research
13.
Clin Teach ; 18(3): 307-310, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33960671
14.
Med Teach ; 43(1): 50-57, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32721185

ABSTRACT

Prescribing (writing medication orders) is one of residents' commonest tasks. Superficially, all they have to do is complete a form. Below this apparent simplicity, though, lies the complex task of framing patients' needs and navigating relationships with them and other clinicians. Mistakes, which compromise patient safety, commonly result. There is no evidence that competence-based education is preventing harm. We found a profound contradiction between medical students becoming competent, as defined by passing competence assessments, and becoming capable of safely caring for patients. We reinstated patients as the object of learning by allowing students to 'pre-prescribe' (complete, but not authorise prescriptions). This turned a disabling tension into a driver of curriculum improvement. Students 'knotworked' within interprofessional teams to the benefit of patients as well as themselves. Refocusing undergraduate medical education on patient care showed promise as a way of improving patient safety.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical, Undergraduate , Students, Medical , Clinical Competence , Competency-Based Education , Curriculum , Humans , Patient Care
15.
Adv Simul (Lond) ; 5: 29, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33106760

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The healthcare needs of our societies are continual changing and evolving. In order to meet these needs, healthcare provision has to be dynamic and reactive to provide the highest standards of safe care. Therefore, there is a continual need to generate new evidence and implement it within healthcare contexts. In recent times, in situ simulation has proven to have been an important educational modality to accelerate individuals' and teams' skills and adaptability to deliver care in local contexts. However, due to the increasing complexity of healthcare, including in community settings, an expanded theoretical informed view of in situ simulation is needed as a form of education that can drive organizational as well as individual learning. MAIN BODY: Cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) provides us with analytical tools to recognize and analyse complex health care systems. Making visible the key elements of an in situ simulation process and their interconnections, CHAT facilitates development of a system-level view of needs of change. CONCLUSION: In this paper, we theorize how CHAT could help guide in situ simulation processes-to generate greater insights beyond the specific simulation context and bring about meaningful transformation of an organizational activity.

17.
Paediatr Drugs ; 22(5): 551-560, 2020 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32627136

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To protect children from harm, clinicians, educators, and patient safety champions need information to direct improvement efforts. Critical incident data could provide this but are often disregarded as a source of evidence because under-reporting makes them an inaccurate measure of error rates. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to identify key targets for pediatric healthcare quality improvement. The objective was to evaluate the types, characteristics, and areas of risk within reported medication errors in pediatric patients. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of a large regional dataset of 1522 pediatric medication errors reported from secondary care between 2011 and 2015, including all hospitals and community pediatric settings in Northern Ireland. The following characteristics were included: error severity, patient age, drug involved, error type, and area of practice. Two academic pediatricians, a senior medicines governance pharmacist, a Reader in Pharmacy Practice, and a Professor of Medical Education analyzed the data. Validity checks included comparing the findings against key published literature and discussion by a practitioner panel representing five multidisciplinary stakeholder groups. RESULTS: Neonates, particularly in intensive care, were implicated in 19% of all errors. The medications most represented in risk were antimicrobials, paracetamol, vaccines, and intravenous fluids. The error types most implicated were dosing errors (32%) and omissions (21%). CONCLUSIONS: Incident reports identified neonates, a shortlist of drugs, and specific error types, associated with modifiable behaviors, as priority improvement targets. These findings direct further study and inform intervention development, such as specific training in calculations to prevent dosing errors. Involving experienced practitioners both endorsed the findings and engaged the practice community in their future implementation. The utility of incident reports to direct improvement efforts may offset the limitations in their representativeness.


Subject(s)
Medication Errors/statistics & numerical data , Quality Improvement , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Medication Errors/prevention & control , National Health Programs , Northern Ireland , Patient Safety , Retrospective Studies , Risk
18.
J Environ Manage ; 261: 110206, 2020 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32148276

ABSTRACT

Green roofs are expanding internationally due to the well documented benefits they provide for buildings and cities. This requires transferable knowledge of the technological aspects influencing green roof design, particularly substrate properties. However, this is made difficult due to differences in substrate testing methods referred to in green roof guidelines and standards. Therefore, we tested a green roof substrate using laboratory-based methods from European (FLL), North American (ASTM) and Australian (AS) green roof guidelines and standards to determine how these methods vary in characterising substrate physical properties (bulk density, water permeability and water holding capacity at field capacity (WHC)). Further, we compared the results from the laboratory-based methods with measures of bulk density and WHC in green roof platforms to determine whether standard methods accurately represent substrate properties in-situ. Results from the standard test methods varied due to differences in sample compaction. The standard test methods that employ Proctor hammer compaction (FLL and ASTM) had greater bulk density (at field capacity and dry) and lower water permeability than Australian standard methods that employ free-fall compaction. WHC did not differ among the standard methods. The Australian standard method better reflected bulk density at field capacity and WHC of the substrate under in-situ green roof conditions. For mineral based substrates, our results suggest that for the FLL and ASTM testing methods, a single Proctor hammer drop will produce a degree of sample compaction equivalent to the free-fall method (AS) and be more representative of bulk density in-situ. Subtle changes in testing procedures would allow for more direct comparison of substrate properties between standard methods and help enable the international transfer of knowledge for substrate design.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Natural Resources , Australia , Cities
19.
BMJ Open ; 9(8): e028680, 2019 08 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31401597

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: (1) Systematically assemble, analyse and synthesise published evidence on causes of prescribing error in children. (2) Present results to a multidisciplinary group of paediatric prescribing stakeholders to validate findings and establish how causative factors lead to errors in practice. DESIGN: Scoping review using Arksey and O'Malley's framework, including stakeholder consultation; qualitative evidence synthesis. METHODS: We followed the six scoping review stages. (1) Research question-the research question was 'What is known about causes of prescribing error in children?' (2) Search strategy-we searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL (from inception to February 2018), grey literature and reference lists of included studies. (3) Article selection-all published evidence contributing information on the causes of prescribing error in children was eligible for inclusion. We included review articles as secondary evidence to broaden understanding. (4) Charting data-results were collated in a custom data charting form. (5) Reporting results-we summarised article characteristics, extracted causal evidence and thematically synthesised findings. (6) Stakeholder consultation-results were presented to a multidisciplinary focus group of six prescribing stakeholders to establish validity, relevance and mechanisms by which causes lead to errors in practice. RESULTS: 68 articles were included. We identified six main causes of prescribing errors: children's fundamental differences led to individualised dosing and calculations; off-licence prescribing; medication formulations; communication with children; and experience working with children. Primary evidence clarifying causes was lacking. CONCLUSIONS: Specific factors complicate prescribing for children and increase risk of errors. Primary research is needed to confirm and elaborate these causes of error. In the meantime, this review uses existing evidence to make provisional paediatric-specific recommendations for policy, practice and education.


Subject(s)
Dosage Forms , Drug Dosage Calculations , Medication Errors , Off-Label Use , Child , Humans
20.
Med Teach ; 41(10): 1098-1105, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31382787

ABSTRACT

The problem: Clinical practice commonly presents new doctors with situations that they are incapable of managing safely. This harms patients and stresses the new doctors and other clinicians. Unpreparedness for practice remains a problem despite changes in curricula from apprenticeship to outcome-based designs. This is unsurprising because capability depends on learning from practical experience in supportive learning environments. To assure the care of patients and well-being of residents, the pedagogy of medical students' practice-based education is in urgent need of an overhaul. This Guide: Experience based learning (ExBL) is a 21st century pedagogy of practice-based learning, derived from best current theory and evidence. ExBL specifies capabilities that medical students need to acquire from practical experience. It exemplifies how clinicians' behavior can help students gain experience. It explains how reflection converts real patient learning into capability and identity. It identifies desirable features of learning environments. This Guide advises clinicians, students, placement leads, faculty developers, and other stakeholders how to make new doctors as capable as possible. ExBL is a comprehensive model of medical students' practice-based learning, which complements competency-based education to prepare new doctors to deliver safe, effective, and compassionate care.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/methods , Problem-Based Learning/methods , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Social Support , Students, Medical
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