Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education

Abstract Background Arguably, Medical School curricula are deficient in learning opportunities related to the safe and effective use of medicines, in particular antimicrobials. Infection management is complex and multidisciplinary, and learning opportunities should reflect these principles. Aligned...

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Main Authors: Clare Guilding, Jessica Hardisty, Elsa Randles, Louise Statham, Alan Green, Roshni Bhudia, Charan Singh Thandi, Andrew Teodorczuk, Lesley Scott, Joanna Matthan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
IPE
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02252-9
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spelling doaj-f35260aacfcc4a899bda1475d62c55302020-11-25T04:08:11ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202020-10-0120111310.1186/s12909-020-02252-9Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial educationClare Guilding0Jessica Hardisty1Elsa Randles2Louise Statham3Alan Green4Roshni Bhudia5Charan Singh Thandi6Andrew Teodorczuk7Lesley Scott8Joanna Matthan9School of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySunderland Pharmacy School, University of SunderlandSchool of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySunderland Pharmacy School, University of SunderlandSunderland Pharmacy School, University of SunderlandSchool of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySchool of Medical Education, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversitySchool of Medicine, Griffith UniversitySchool of Nursing and Health Science, University of SunderlandSchool of Dental Sciences, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle UniversityAbstract Background Arguably, Medical School curricula are deficient in learning opportunities related to the safe and effective use of medicines, in particular antimicrobials. Infection management is complex and multidisciplinary, and learning opportunities should reflect these principles. Aligned to the complexity of the subject matter, simulation and interprofessional based teaching are methods that can foster the collaborative skills required of future healthcare professionals. There have been calls to develop these methods in the teaching of safe prescribing and the management of infections; however, reports of such studies are limited. Methods We developed an interprofessional education (IPE) conference for second year undergraduate medical and pharmacy students based in the North East of England. We considered contact theory in the design of three small group interprofessional workshops, on the broad themes of antimicrobial stewardship, infection management and patient safety. A mixed methods approach assessed students’ attitudes towards IPE, barriers and facilitators of learning, and perceived learning gains. Qualitative data from workshop evaluation forms were analysed thematically, while quantitative data were analysed descriptively and differences between medical and pharmacy cohorts analysed using unpaired two-tailed t-tests. Results 226/352 students returned the workshop evaluation forms (66% of pharmacy students, 62% of medical students). 281/352 students responded to a series of Likert scale questions on the value of interprofessional education (88% of pharmacy students, 70% of medical students). Students reported acquisition of knowledge and skills, including concepts and procedures related to infection management and antimicrobial prescribing, and the development of problem-solving and critical evaluation skills. Students reflected on their attitude towards interprofessional collaboration. They reported a greater understanding of the roles of other healthcare professionals, reflected on the importance of effective communication in ensuring patient safety, and were more confident to work in interprofessional teams after the conference. Conclusions A robust IPE event, theoretically underpinned by contact theory and developed collaboratively, achieved interprofessional learning at scale and helped develop healthcare professionals willing to collaborate across disciplines. The resources, and evaluation insights based on the 3P (presage, process, and product) model of learning and teaching, will be of value to other educators who seek to develop theoretically-sound IPE interventions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02252-9Interprofessional educationIPEInterprofessional learningSimulationPrescribingAntibiotics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clare Guilding
Jessica Hardisty
Elsa Randles
Louise Statham
Alan Green
Roshni Bhudia
Charan Singh Thandi
Andrew Teodorczuk
Lesley Scott
Joanna Matthan
spellingShingle Clare Guilding
Jessica Hardisty
Elsa Randles
Louise Statham
Alan Green
Roshni Bhudia
Charan Singh Thandi
Andrew Teodorczuk
Lesley Scott
Joanna Matthan
Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
BMC Medical Education
Interprofessional education
IPE
Interprofessional learning
Simulation
Prescribing
Antibiotics
author_facet Clare Guilding
Jessica Hardisty
Elsa Randles
Louise Statham
Alan Green
Roshni Bhudia
Charan Singh Thandi
Andrew Teodorczuk
Lesley Scott
Joanna Matthan
author_sort Clare Guilding
title Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
title_short Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
title_full Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
title_fullStr Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
title_full_unstemmed Designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
title_sort designing and evaluating an interprofessional education conference approach to antimicrobial education
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Arguably, Medical School curricula are deficient in learning opportunities related to the safe and effective use of medicines, in particular antimicrobials. Infection management is complex and multidisciplinary, and learning opportunities should reflect these principles. Aligned to the complexity of the subject matter, simulation and interprofessional based teaching are methods that can foster the collaborative skills required of future healthcare professionals. There have been calls to develop these methods in the teaching of safe prescribing and the management of infections; however, reports of such studies are limited. Methods We developed an interprofessional education (IPE) conference for second year undergraduate medical and pharmacy students based in the North East of England. We considered contact theory in the design of three small group interprofessional workshops, on the broad themes of antimicrobial stewardship, infection management and patient safety. A mixed methods approach assessed students’ attitudes towards IPE, barriers and facilitators of learning, and perceived learning gains. Qualitative data from workshop evaluation forms were analysed thematically, while quantitative data were analysed descriptively and differences between medical and pharmacy cohorts analysed using unpaired two-tailed t-tests. Results 226/352 students returned the workshop evaluation forms (66% of pharmacy students, 62% of medical students). 281/352 students responded to a series of Likert scale questions on the value of interprofessional education (88% of pharmacy students, 70% of medical students). Students reported acquisition of knowledge and skills, including concepts and procedures related to infection management and antimicrobial prescribing, and the development of problem-solving and critical evaluation skills. Students reflected on their attitude towards interprofessional collaboration. They reported a greater understanding of the roles of other healthcare professionals, reflected on the importance of effective communication in ensuring patient safety, and were more confident to work in interprofessional teams after the conference. Conclusions A robust IPE event, theoretically underpinned by contact theory and developed collaboratively, achieved interprofessional learning at scale and helped develop healthcare professionals willing to collaborate across disciplines. The resources, and evaluation insights based on the 3P (presage, process, and product) model of learning and teaching, will be of value to other educators who seek to develop theoretically-sound IPE interventions.
topic Interprofessional education
IPE
Interprofessional learning
Simulation
Prescribing
Antibiotics
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02252-9
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