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Building a comprehensive mentoring academy for schools of health.
Formal mentoring programs are increasingly recognized as critical for faculty career development. We describe a mentoring academy (MA) developed for faculty across tracks (i.e., researchers, clinicians, educators) within a "school of health" encompassing schools of medicine and nursing. The program is anchored dually in a clinical and translational science center and a school of health. The structure includes the involvement of departmental and center mentoring directors to achieve widespread uptake and oversight. A fundamental resource provided by the MA includes providing workshops to enhance mentoring skills. Initiatives for junior faculty emphasize establishing and maintaining strong mentoring relationships and implementing individual development plans (IDPs) for career planning. We present self-report data on competency improvement from mentor workshops and data on resources and barriers identified by junior faculty (n = 222) in their IDPs. Mentors reported statistically significantly improved mentoring competency after workshop participation. Junior faculty most frequently identified mentors (61%) and collaborators (23%) as resources for goal attainment. Top barriers included insufficient time and time-management issues (57%), funding limitations (18%), work-life balance issues (18%), including inadequate time for self-care and career development activities. Our MA can serve as a model and roadmap for providing resources to faculty across traditional tracks within medical schools
Caring in therapeutic radiography : an exploration of academic educator perceptions and experiences
Caring is frequently espoused in healthcare. It is embedded in policy and
professional codes of conduct. Since failings in healthcare were investigated and published in the Francis Report, a greater emphasis was placed upon educational providers to ensure caring was part of the curricula. This was to enable the graduation of caring practitioners. Despite attempts to determine the notion of caring in the nursing and medical literature, it remains troublesome and nebulous. In therapeutic radiography there is a paucity of literature leaving the concept of caring mostly unexplored. This suggests a gap in knowledge. Without an understanding of the construct of caring in therapeutic radiography, it could be problematic for educators who must foster caring in students. This study explored the perceptions and experiences of caring with academic therapeutic radiography educators and how these influenced their teaching practice. A descriptive, Husserlian phenomenological study was undertaken. This allowed bracketing, whereby the researcherâs views of caring could be acknowledged and set aside. Semi-structured interviews were transcribed and the modified van Kaam approach utilised for data analysis. Four themes were identified. âBeing Caringâ related to the caring characteristics and moral virtue of therapeutic radiography educators. Experiences in the lives of participants were considered influential antecedents to âBeing Caringâ. A further important antecedent influencing teaching practice was the previous clinical role. A duality to caring emerged which included âCaring Forâ and âCaring Aboutâ. âCaring Forâ was a task-oriented practical dimension of caring in both clinical and educational settings. âCaring Aboutâ was perceived as emotive and feelings focussed. Prominent sub-themes were humanity, relationships and rapport, borne from âknowingâ patients and students enabling a âconnectednessâ with them as individuals. âCaring Aboutâ involved behaviours âabove and beyondâ the essential perfunctory âCaring Forâ. The final theme of âCaring in Pedagogy and Curriculumâ involved implicit and explicit aspects. Explicit dimensions of teaching included compassion, empathy and person-centred holistic care. Experiential learning and related reflection were considered opportunities for educators to model caring to students. However implicit role modelling was believed particularly influential in teaching practice. By âCaring Aboutâ, educators could nurture and enhance caring in students. This was related to the concept of a caring educator facilitating student-centred caring. This research contributes to the knowledge base as the first UK study to explore caring with academic therapeutic radiography educators. Dimensions of âCaring Forâ and âCaring Aboutâ provide a framework through which teaching caring can be facilitated. It provides a new lens to caring in the specific academic setting which is important to teaching practice and the therapeutic radiography profession. Behaviours of the caring educator would enable academic therapeutic radiographers to reflect upon their own professional practice. Findings from this study can be used to better enable caring students entering the clinical setting as practitioners of the future
Confidence amongst multidisciplinary professionals in managing paediatric rheumatic disease in Australia
Objective. Interprofessional collaboration is a crucial component of care for children with rheumatic disease. Interprofessional care, when delivered appropriately, prevents disability and improves long-term prognosis in this vulnerable group. Methods. The aim of this survey was to explore allied health professionalsâ and nursesâ confidence in treating paediatric rheumatology patients. Results. Overall, 117 participants were recruited, 77.9% of participants reported being ânot confident at all,â ânot confident,â or âneutralâ in treating children with rheumatic diseases (RD) despite 65.1% of participants reporting having treated >1 paediatric rheumatology case in the past month. Furthermore, 67.2% of participants felt their undergraduate education in paediatric rheumatology was inadequate. âJournalsâ or âtexts booksâ were used by 49.3% of participants as their primary source of continuing professional development (CPD) and 39.3% of participants indicated that they did not undertake any CPD related to paediatric rheumatology. Small group and online education were perceived to be potentially of âgreat benefitâ for CPD. Conclusion. This paper highlights allied health professionalsâ and nursesâ perceived inadequacy of their undergraduate education in paediatric RD and their low confidence in recognising and treating RD. Undergraduate and postgraduate education opportunities focusing on interprofessional collaboration should be developed to address this workforce deficiency
Irritable Bowel Syndrome patients exhibit depressive and anxiety scores in the subsyndromal range
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients frequently experience affective disorders and psychiatric outpatients frequently meet criteria for IBS. The exact nature of this co-morbidity is not clear. 34 patients with Rome-II diagnosed IBS were recruited from a Gastroenterology clinic. Patients with social anxiety disorder (10 SSRI-remitted and 7 untreated subjects) were used as a psychiatric comparison, 28 normal subjects from our register were included as a fourth group (Volunteers). Depressive and anxiety symptoms were measured by the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Spielberger Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), respectively. Personality traits were measured with the Swedish universities Scales of Personality (SSP). IBS subjects had BDI and STAI scores intermediate between those of volunteers and patients, despite their lack of a co-morbid psychiatric diagnosis. A principle component factor analysis of the SSP dataset corresponded closely to the solution published with other samples. ANOVA revealed significant between-group differences for 7 of the 13 SSP variables
A prospective study comparing radiographer and clinician based localisation for patients with metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC) to assess the feasibility of a radiographer led service.
OBJECTIVES:
To investigate if there was parity between treatment fields localised by radiographers and clinicians, by comparing geographical variations and hence determining the feasibility of a radiographer led service.
METHODS:
23 patients with metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC) were prospectively sampled. 4 radiographers not involved in the original planning performed a localisation on each patient. The 92 localisations were compared to the clinicians approved field. Agreement was defined as â€0.5cm between field length, width and 3 isocentre coordinates. To be feasible agreement was required in a minimum of 97% of the cases. The potential time saved with a radiographer led approach was also recorded.
RESULTS:
Agreement between clinicians and radiographers was 97.8%. For all field parameters, the average differences were <0.3cm and was significantly different from the 0.5cm median (p<0.0001) that would establish no agreement using wilcoxon signed rank test. The average (range) delay waiting for clinician approval was 54 minutes (4 minutes to 141 minutes).
CONCLUSIONS:
Strong agreement between radiographers and clinicians localisation was established. It was also highlighted that time could be saved in the patient's pathway by removing the need to wait for clinician approval. We believe this supports a radiographer led service. Advances in Knowledge: This article is novel as it is the first known comparison between clinicians and radiographers in the localisation of MSCC radiotherapy. This data shows the feasibility of introducing radiographer led practice and a methodology that could be potentially transferred to investigate the localisation parity for other treatment sites
Using a meta-ethnographic approach to explore the nature of facilitation and teaching approaches employed in interprofessional education.
BACKGROUND: Interprofessional facilitators and teachers are regarded as central to the effective delivery of interprofessional education (IPE). As the IPE literature continues to expand, most studies have focused on reporting learner outcomes, with little attention paid to IPE facilitation. However, a number of studies have recently emerged reporting on this phenomenon. AIM: To present a synthesis of qualitative evidence on the facilitation of IPE, using a meta-ethnographic approach. METHODS: Electronic databases and journals were searched for the past 10 years. Of the 2164 abstracts initially found, 94 full papers were reviewed and subsequently 12 papers were included. Teams of two reviewers independently completed each step in the review process. The quality of these papers was assessed using a modified critical appraisal checklist. RESULTS: Seven key concepts embedded in the included studies were synthesized into three main factors which provided an insight into the nature of IPE facilitation. Specifically, the synthesis found that IPE facilitation is influenced by "contextual characteristics"; "facilitator experiences"; and the "use of different facilitation strategies". CONCLUSIONS: IPE facilitation is a complex activity affected by contextual, experiential and pedagogical factors. Further research is needed to explore the effects of these factors on the delivery of IPE
The clinical presentation, utilization, and outcome of individuals with sickle cell anaemia presenting to urban emergency department of a tertiary hospital in Tanzania
Background
Sickle cell anaemia (SCA) is prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa, with high risk of complications requiring emergency care. There is limited information about presentation of patients with SCA to hospitals for emergency care. We describe the clinical presentation, resource utilization, and outcomes of SCA patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) at Muhimbili National Hospital (MNH) in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Methods
This was a prospective cohort study of consecutive patients with SCA presenting to ED between December 2014 and July 2015. Informed consent was obtained from all patients or patientsâ proxies prior to being enrolled in the study. A standardized case report form was used to record study information, including demographics, relevant clinical characteristics and overall patients outcomes. Categorical variables were compared with chi-square test or Fisherâs exact test; continuous variables were compared with two-sample t-test or Mann-Whitney U-test.
Results
We enrolled 752 (2.7%) people with SCA from 28,322 patients who presented to the MNH-ED. The median age was 14Â years (Interquartile range [IQR]: 6â23Â years), and 395 (52.8%) were female. Pain 614 (81.6%), fever 289 (38.4%) were the most frequent presenting complaint. Patients with fever, hypoxia, altered mental status and bradycardia had statistically significant relative risk of mortality of 10.4, 153, 50 and 12.1 (pâ<â0.0001) respectively, compared to patients with normal vitals. Overall, 656 (87.2%) patients received Complete Blood Cell counts test, of these 342 (52.1%) had severe anaemia (haemoglobin <â7Â g/dl), and a 30.3 (pâ=â0.02) relative risk of relative risk of mortality compare to patients with higher haemoglobin. Patients who had malaria, elevated renal function test and hypoglycemia, had relative risk of mortality of 22.9, 10.4 and 45.2 (pâ<â0.0001) respectively, compared to patient with normal values. Most 534 (71.0%) patients were hospitalized for in patients care, and the overall morality rate was 16 (2.1%).
Conclusions
We described the clinical presentation, management, and outcomes of patients with SCA presenting to the largest public ED in Tanzania, as well as information on resource utilization. This information can inform development of treatment guidelines, clinical staff education, and clinical research aimed at optimizing care for SCA patients
CARer-ADministration of as-needed subcutaneous medication for breakthrough symptoms in homebased dying patients (CARiAD):study protocol for a UK-based open randomised pilot trial
Legal framework. (DOCX 23 kb
Carer administration of as-needed sub-cutaneous medication for breakthrough symptoms in people dying at home: the CARiAD feasibility RCT
Background
Most people who are dying want to be cared for at home, but only half of them achieve this. The likelihood of a home death often depends on the availability of able and willing lay carers. When people who are dying are unable to take oral medication, injectable medication is used. When top-up medication is required, a health-care professional travels to the dying personâs home, which may delay symptom relief. The administration of subcutaneous medication by lay carers, although not widespread UK practice, has proven to be key in achieving better symptom control for those dying at home in other countries.
Objectives
To determine if carer administration of as-needed subcutaneous medication for common breakthrough symptoms in people dying at home is feasible and acceptable in the UK, and if it would be feasible to test this intervention in a future definitive randomised controlled trial.
Design
We conducted a two-arm, parallel-group, individually randomised, open pilot trial of the intervention versus usual care, with a 1â:â1 allocation ratio, using convergent mixed methods.
Setting
Home-based care without 24/7 paid care provision, in three UK sites.
Participants
Participants were dyads of adult patients and carers: patients in the last weeks of their life who wished to die at home and lay carers who were willing to be trained to give subcutaneous medication. Strict risk assessment criteria needed to be met before approach, including known history of substance abuse or carer ability to be trained to competency.
Intervention
Intervention-group carers received training by local nurses using a manualised training package.
Main outcome measures
Quantitative data were collected at baseline and 6â8 weeks post bereavement and via carer diaries. Interviews with carers and health-care professionals explored attitudes to, experiences of and preferences for giving subcutaneous medication and experience of trial processes. The main outcomes of interest were feasibility, acceptability, recruitment rates, attrition and selection of the most appropriate outcome measures.
Results
In total, 40 out of 101 eligible dyads were recruited (39.6%), which met the feasibility criterion of recruiting >â30% of eligible dyads. The expected recruitment target (â50 dyads) was not reached, as fewer than expected participants were identified. Although the overall retention rate was 55% (22/40), this was substantially unbalanced [30% (6/20) usual care and 80% (16/20) intervention]. The feasibility criterion of >â40% retention was, therefore, considered not met. A total of 12 carers (intervention, nâ=â10; usual care, nâ=â2) and 20 health-care professionals were interviewed. The intervention was considered acceptable, feasible and safe in the small study population. The context of the feasibility study was not ideal, as district nurses were seriously overstretched and unfamiliar with research methods. A disparity in readiness to consider the intervention was demonstrated between carers and health-care professionals. Findings showed that there were methodological and ethics issues pertaining to researching last days of life care.
Conclusion
The success of a future definitive trial is uncertain because of equivocal results in the progression criteria, particularly poor recruitment overall and a low retention rate in the usual-care group. Future work regarding the intervention should include understanding the context of UK areas where this has been adopted, ascertaining wider public views and exploring health-care professional views on burden and risk in the NHS context. There should be consideration of the need for national policy and of the most appropriate quantitative outcome measures to use. This will help to ascertain if there are unanswered questions to be studied in a trial.
Trial registration
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN11211024.
Funding
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 24, No. 25. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information
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