| Literature DB >> 24299734 |
Deborah Tregunno1, Liane Ginsburg, Beth Clarke, Peter Norton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As efforts to integrate patient safety into health professional curricula increase, there is growing recognition that the rate of curricular change is very slow, and there is a shortage of research that addresses critical perspectives of faculty who are on the 'front-lines' of curricular innovation. This study reports on medical, nursing and pharmacy teaching faculty perspectives about factors that influence curricular integration and the preparation of safe practitioners.Entities:
Keywords: Continuing education, continuing professional development; Medical education; Nurses; Patient safety; Pharmacists
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24299734 PMCID: PMC3932978 DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2013-001900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Qual Saf ISSN: 2044-5415 Impact factor: 7.035
Challenges to safe practice themes and narrative data
| Theme | Narrative data |
|---|---|
| (i) Clinical safety areas | ‘time pressures on nurses, tied very closely with communication—time pressures cripple communication and then people stop thinking about what they're doing’ (Nurse) |
| (ii) Priority setting | ‘I'm concerned about gerontology curriculum and people aren't learning enough about these things and then they're not able to provide good care. (Nurse) |
Challenges in preparing safe practitioners themes and narrative data
| Categories | Narrative data |
|---|---|
| (iii) Culture of the clinical practice setting | ‘students go to medical and surgical units and are treated very poorly by the staff and having things said to them that are difficult. They see practices that are different than what they are taught or that are offensive’ (Nurse) |
| (iv) Formal vs informal teaching | ‘Patient safety is integrated into everything we do as clinical educators—are they giving proper hygiene? Oral care? Language and culture issues with our international students. These issues come up during clinical assignments and in post-clinical conferences.’ (Nurse) |
| (v) Faculty preparation | ‘Different preceptors, different standards. You have preceptors who may feel threatened that the student may ask them complex questions and therefore will be very laid back and easy and pass the student. Other preceptors will say ‘Oh I hate students because I know they're going to ask me difficult questions.’ (Nurse) |
| (vi) Authenticity | ‘no matter how much we try to simulate reality, the learning environment is very controlled. And then when they're out in that clinical setting it's the real world and it's increasingly complex and they have the responsibility now of being a registered nurse. Which you can't simulate really.’ (Nurse) |
Faculty concerns categories and narrative data
| Theme | Narrative data |
|---|---|
| (vii) Academic-practice gap | ‘ It has been 10 years since I was supervising a clinical practice and back then I made it my business to work one or two shifts a month on the floor. But that wasn't the norm either. Most of my colleagues it has been even longer. Some of them worked 1 year clinical and then they've been on faculty for decades.’ (Nurse) |