| Literature DB >> 27499364 |
Désirée A Lie1, Christopher P Forest2, Anne Walsh3, Yvonne Banzali4, Kevin Lohenry2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The student-run clinic (SRC) has the potential to address interprofessional learning among health professions students.Entities:
Keywords: focus group; interprofessional education; student-run clinic; theoretical framework; underserved
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27499364 PMCID: PMC4976304 DOI: 10.3402/meo.v21.31900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Question guides for focus groups for interprofessional student-run clinic, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, 2016
| Key questions | Probes |
|---|---|
| Uniprofessional groups | |
| 1. Tell us what you learned about another profession that was new or surprising to you, and which profession/s you were most likely to learn something new about. | • Why were you surprised? |
| 2. What were the aspects of team-based care that were improved/worsened compared with care in settings where care is provided by one profession only? | • Why do you think this aspect of care was enhanced/made worse? |
| 3. Other than interprofessional learning, what else did you learn from the SRC that is likely to impact your future practice? | • Has the experience affected your career choice? Clinical skills? |
| 4. Share your thoughts about the value of the SRC experience for professional development. | • No probes. |
| Multiprofessional groups | |
| 1. What are best ways for you to learn to prepare for future practice? | • How do you prepare for future practice? |
| 2. How is precepting in the IPE model different or similar from your experience of precepting in your training? | • What did you learn from preceptors? |
| 3. How did the process of care impact your learning in the SRC? | • What did you learn from seeing the patient as a team? |
| 4. Tell us what you think is the optimal learning environment for IPE. | • No probes. |
Demographics of students participating in focus groups, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, 2016, N=50
| Student profession | Total number in focus groups | Age/years | Female |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine | 14 | 9, 5, 0, 0 | 8 |
| Occupational therapy | 9 | 0, 6, 1, 2 | 8 |
| Pharmacy | 12 | 9, 3, 0, 0 | 9 |
| Physician assistant | 15 | 1, 10, 2, 2 | 14 |
Major themes and typical quotes, interprofessional student-run clinic focus groups, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, 2016
| Major themes | Representative quotes, by student profession and letter |
|---|---|
| Uniprofessional groups ( | |
| Recognition of other professions’ roles and scope of practice | I didn't realize the extent of medication reconciliation that pharmacy can do … how much they know dosing and interactions … how much physicians lean on them. (OT/C) I had no understanding … that PAs played such a large role in managing primary cases as well as … performing surgery. (OT/A) I thought everything musculoskeletal went to PT …. That was one thing I'll use now and in practice: hand issues to OT. (PA/C) |
| Appreciation of benefits of team-based care | I don't think I'll ever overestimate my profession … asking other professions for help leads to better outcomes in patients. (PA/E) (I learned) that collaboration is for the patient's benefit … the ultimate goal of getting them … healthy. (OT/B) (Patients’) concerns addressed from multiple angles and different people spend time with them, that's a benefit. (Medical/C) |
| Patient experience of student-run clinic | If the patient has access to people influencing social determinants … you can tackle a problem from all angles …. (PA/A) It can also help the patients, giving them increased access to care because if they were only seen by one provider, they would need to get a referral (Pharmacy/A) The majority (of patients), greater than 90%, would choose team-based care over regular, single provider care …. (Medical/A) |
| Role of advocacy/systems care | It make sense see how an interprofessional patient-centered medical home could be key to cost reduction, increased quality. (PA/A) … taught me how to be between the student and the preceptor to ensure balance between learning and student engagement … teaches initiative. (Pharmacy/C) I wasn't expecting to take on as much responsibility, and it's been a tremendous learning in leadership. (Medical/A) |
| Improved leadership and clinical skills | What I gained is (the skill) advocacy, speaking up, explaining the role of OT … fighting for our place in student-run clinic. (OT/A) … the SRC influenced me to go into that areas like the Veterans Administration or underserved clinics. (Pharmacy/A) |
| Impact on own future career | (The student-run clinic) solidified in me that teaching and team-based care … is a part of me … for the rest of my career. (OT/B) … more time for the patient's story… directed my future career path to go into (primary care) to allow me to do so. (Pharmacy/D) The SRC exposed me to … homeless and impoverished populations … I see myself working with in the future. (Medical/B) |
| Multiprofessional groups ( | |
| Most valuable learning occurred in the patient encounter | Sitting with the patient taking turns asking questions is effective … we see how professions phrase questions differently (Pharmacy/10) I believe that when we (students) are all in the room together interviewing the patient, it is the best learning situation. (OT/7) |
| Learning takes place in the huddle, during informal conversations, and during the patient encounter | I've learned from other professions different ways to ask things and the motivation for asking. (Medical/1) Pulling back the lens, seeing it from a wider perspective. Every time you huddle you see the patient in a more holistic way. (OT/7) We definitely learn from the other disciplines when we are around them. (OT/4) |
| Learning occurs with patients, seniors, peers, and preceptors from other professions | Exposure to students further along in their training facilitates (my) learning. (Medical/5) Informal chitchatting with other professions is helpful. (PA/13) We (have) preceptors who are not OTs and that adds a whole other dimension to what we learn. (OT/4) |
| Most helpful teaching technique is direct feedback with hands-on practice | I want immediate feedback … instructors that are willing to show first and then have me repeat back are most helpful. (OT/4) (Preceptors are) more helpful if they give me the clinical reasoning behind what they're doing. (OT/3) They show you … then you do it with their guidance. (PA/5) |
Medical=medical student; OT=occupational therapy student; Pharmacy=pharmacy student; PA=physician assistant.
Fig. 1Proposed framework for learning in interprofessional student-run clinic environment.