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1.
Acad Med ; 99(3): 290-295, 2024 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37976381

RESUMEN

PROBLEM: Interprofessional education (IPE) is valued but difficult to deliver, given logistical and other barriers. Centering IPE around patients and grounding it in authentic practice settings are challenging within early undergraduate medical education. APPROACH: This intervention facilitated student-patient conversations to elicit patient reflections on the health care professionals who keep them healthy and care for them when they are unwell. After being introduced to the Interprofessional Education Collaborative (IPEC) core competencies, first-year medical (n = 127) and dental (n = 34) students conducted a brief semistructured patient interview, using an interview card with guiding questions, during a precepted outpatient clinic session in March-May 2021. Students transcribed patients' stories and wrote their own reflections on the interview card. These reflections were used as a stimulus for a class IPE discussion. The authors employed a pragmatic qualitative research approach to explore what students learned about interprofessional collaboration from reflecting on patients' stories. OUTCOMES: Of the 161 students, 158 (98%) completed an interview card. Sixteen health professions were represented in patients' stories. The patients' stories prompted students to recognize and expand their understanding of the IPEC competencies. Students' responses reflected synthesis of the competencies into 3 themes: students value patient-centered holistic care as the goal of interprofessional collaboration; students reflect emerging professional and interprofessional identities in relating to patients, teams, and systems; and students appreciate interprofessional care is complex and challenging, requiring sustained effort and commitment. NEXT STEPS: Next steps include continuing to integrate patient voices through structured conversations across the undergraduate and graduate medical education spectrum and adapting the model to support conversations with other health professionals engaged in shared patient care. These experiences could foster ongoing deliberate reflection by students on their professional and interprofessional identity development but would require investments in student time and faculty development.


Asunto(s)
Educación de Pregrado en Medicina , Estudiantes de Odontología , Humanos , Educación Interprofesional , Investigación Cualitativa , Comunicación , Relaciones Interprofesionales
4.
MedEdPORTAL ; 17: 11191, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34754938

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Safe, patient-centered, and cost-effective care requires effective collaboration within interprofessional teams. Education programs for health care professionals are often siloed, providing students with limited interprofessional education (IPE) opportunities to learn from, with, and about other professions. Podcasts offer a novel approach to facilitate IPE, allowing for asynchronous conversations with interprofessional colleagues. METHODS: We developed four podcasts with various health care professionals for 135 preclinical medical students preparing to transition into clinical rotations. The podcasts were coupled with an hour-long interactive session with the podcast interviewees conducted via videoconference. The curriculum explored the distinct education paths, roles, and responsibilities of various health care disciplines. Strategies for communicating effectively with and learning from interprofessional team members were emphasized. RESULTS: There were 197 unique downloads of the podcasts, and 95 students attended the interactive session. Most students reported that the podcasts and follow-up live session enhanced their learning (100% and 98% of students who completed the postcurriculum survey, respectively). Responses to the postcurriculum survey revealed students learned strategies for engaging in productive interprofessional conversations, the importance of leveraging the distinct roles and responsibilities of diverse health professionals, the value of learning from other health professionals, and the use of respectful language. DISCUSSION: This IPE curriculum built around podcasts enhances medical student learning and represents an innovative approach to improving access to IPE in a virtual learning environment. This modality can be adapted to meet the needs of a wide spectrum of learners and can be coupled with in-person learning.


Asunto(s)
Estudiantes de Medicina , Curriculum , Personal de Salud , Humanos , Relaciones Interprofesionales , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
5.
MedEdPORTAL ; 17: 11076, 2021 01 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33511272

RESUMEN

Introduction: Burnout is prevalent in health care. As professionals advocate to increase resilience training as a strategy to reduce burnout, few examples exist of practical resilience programs that equip faculty to help students build and sustain well-being over time. Method: We developed two straightforward, skills-based resilience exercises. Breaking Down Easy taught individuals to identify personal strengths. My Resilience Practice helped individuals identify strategies to cope with daily stressors. We taught these exercises to international faculty in a train-the-trainer workshop format, at two medical education conferences. Faculty applied the exercises, performed pair-share reflections, and discussed opportunities to introduce the exercises in their own institutions. Postsession surveys evaluated the workshop quality and the exercises' ease of use and applicability. Results: Thirty-five faculty and five students participated across two international conferences. Of participants, 83% (33 of 40) completed postsession surveys. On a 5-point Likert scale, participants rated the workshop on average 4.4 for usefulness, 4.6 for applicability, 4.4 for ease of instruction, 4.5 for clarity, and 4.8 for overall quality. Participants found the exercises to be straightforward to use and planned to use them at their institutions with students, residents, and faculty. Discussion: Participants found our workshop to be relevant and effective and shared their intention to incorporate these materials into their teaching with medical students, residents, and faculty. Implementing effective programs to build resilience is critical to increasing well-being and reducing burnout. This, in turn, may enhance patient safety and improve health system outcomes.


Asunto(s)
Agotamiento Profesional , Educación Médica , Estudiantes de Medicina , Agotamiento Profesional/prevención & control , Docentes , Humanos
6.
Med Teach ; 42(11): 1308-1309, 2020 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32657666

RESUMEN

The world is in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. Healthcare professionals and students globally are experiencing an increasingly 'VUCA' (volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous) healthcare and educational climate. Our future medical workforce needs skillsets to manage the personal and emotional challenges of work, uncertainty and change. These include organization, time management, proactive and consistent clinical skill development, effective communication, person-centred approaches, self-reflection and self-care. This is critical for success during undergraduate medical education and ongoing clinical practice to build personal resilience, provide the best possible clinical care in a different healthcare ecosystem, innovate for better healthcare systems and advocate for more vulnerable communities. Our faculty and students have been eager to learn and apply solution-oriented coaching skills to help to mitigate against burnout, hold more rewarding, person-centred conversations in clinical practice and enable them personally to respond flexibly and adapt constructively to change. Coaching training should comprise an essential component of the undergraduate medical curriculum and continuing professional development, supporting our medical workforce to derive joy from the practice of humanistic healthcare and develop the leadership skills to help shape a way forward through the challenges we are experiencing in an increasingly VUCA healthcare climate.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica , Infecciones por Coronavirus/epidemiología , Educación Médica/organización & administración , Personal de Salud/educación , Neumonía Viral/epidemiología , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Curriculum , Humanos , Liderazgo , Tutoría , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2 , Facultades de Medicina/organización & administración
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