| Literature DB >> 30515469 |
Diane K Brown1, Sue Fosnight2,3, Maureen Whitford4, Susan Hazelett5, Colleen Mcquown6, Jenifer C Drost7, Denise J Kropp8, Cynthia A Hovland9, Joan E Niederriter10, Rikki Patton11, Abigail Morgan12, Eileen Fleming5, Richard P Steiner13, Edward Demond Scott14,15, Fabiana Ortiz-Figueroa14,16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One in three people over the age of 65 fall every year, with 1/3 sustaining at least moderate injury. Falls risk reduction requires an interprofessional health team approach. The literature is lacking in effective models to teach students how to work collaboratively in interprofessional teams for geriatric falls prevention. The purpose of this paper is to describe the development, administration and outcome measures of an education programme to teach principles of interprofessional care for older adults in the context of falls prevention.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30515469 PMCID: PMC6231104 DOI: 10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Qual ISSN: 2399-6641
Figure 1Education model.
Figure 2PDSA model. PDSA, plan-do-study-act.
Education steps, lessons learnt and IPEC Core Competency mapping
| Education step | Description | Lessons learnt: QI Revisions | IPEC Core Competency |
| Didactic | Online narrated slides with content related to geriatric falls risk assessments and interventions, and TeamSTEPPS teamwork concepts. | Length decreased from 2 hours to 1 hour; supplemental slides for medicine and pharmacy. | VE |
| Posters/Skills practice | Visual display of focused didactic points with hands-on skills practice. Topics included environmental factors, nutrition, cognition, pharmacology, mobility and TeamSTEPPS. Short encounters with each topic facilitated in small groups. | Time at each poster was lengthened to 8–9 min. Small groups were changed from interprofessional to single professional. Presentations were standardised for active learning focus. | VE |
| Presimulation discipline huddles | Single professional groups receive report on a complex geriatric simulation patient. Profession-specific assessments, goals and interventions are planned over 10 min with a facilitator. | Original format was to require students to request information. Revision to providing details to meet time limits and allow time for planning. | VE |
| Interprofessional team meeting simulation | Interprofessional teams meet to discuss a simulated patient. Each profession offers assessment details and suggestions for a plan of care to decrease falls risk. Facilitator led, 20 min discussion, 20-25 min debrief. | Original details of the case were enhanced to provide each represented profession a meaningful stake in the discussion and solution. Standardisation for facilitators added. | VE |
| Volunteer patient assessments and care planning | Interprofessional student teams conduct a falls risk assessment (under the supervision of practitioners from our Falls clinic) on a volunteer older adult. Coordination of the assessment among team members and interaction with the patient are goals to reveal a patient-centred plan. | This component of the education was added in the second year to help students transition education into practice. Time was lengthened from 40 to 50 min. | VE |
| Expert team feedback | The patient-centred plan developed for the volunteer assessed is shared with a panel of experts for feedback. Each team has 10 min to present their case and plan for feedback. | Minor adjustments decreased time to 10 min for each team to present to a panel of experts. | VE |
CC, interprofessional communication, IPEC, Interprofessional Education Collaboration; RR, roles/responsibilities; TT, teams/teamwork; VE, value/ethics
Skills practice poster stations
| Major topic | Assessment tools and interactive skill(s) |
| Cognitive assessment | Mini-Cog screen, Depression screen (PHQ-9) |
| Medication assessment | Medication review for falls risk |
| Mobility assessment | Timed Up and Go test, Strength and balance evaluation |
| Nutrition assessment | Nutrition screening tool, grip strength measurement |
| Environment assessment | Search pictures for environmental risk activity |
| TeamSTEPPS | TeamSTEPPS communication interactive game |
Student demographics
| Characteristic | Count | % |
| Profession | ||
| Allied Health* | 105 | 56.1 |
| Nursing | 63 | 33.7 |
| Medicine | 10 | 5.3 |
| Pharmacy | 9 | 4.8 |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 149 | 72.3 |
| Male | 57 | 27.7 |
| Race | ||
| White | 163 | 79.5 |
| Black or African American | 16 | 7.8 |
| More than one race | 11 | 5.4 |
| Asian | 9 | 4.4 |
| Race not reported | 6 | 2.9 |
| Age (years) | ||
| 17–26 | 147 | 75.4 |
| 27–41 | 34 | 17.4 |
| 42–63 | 14 | 7.1 |
| Total | 205 |
*Speech, physical, occupational therapies, nutrition, social work, counselling, chaplain, Emergency Medical Tech.
ISVS analysis comparing pretest vs post-test scale scores and total score
| Scale | Pretest mean ( | Post-test mean ( | Mean change ( | P values |
| Ability | 5.17 | 5.34 | 0.17 | <0.001 |
| Value | 5.11 | 5.31 | 0.21 | <0.001 |
| Comfort | 4.48 | 4.61 | 0.21 | <0.001 |
| Total | 5.01 | 5.20 | 0.19 | <0.001 |
ISVS, Interprofessional Socialization and Valuing Scale.
Qualitative satisfaction survey comments
| Comment topic | Comment | Count of students who gave response |
| Online didactics and other educational materials (n=117) | Beneficial/prepared us for the simulation | 52 |
| Too long/redundant | 11 | |
| Not beneficial | 8 | |
| Poster/Skills training posters (n=135) | Good review/good information/helpful | 88 |
| Need more time at each station | 13 | |
| Crowded/too noisy/hard to read | 11 | |
| Some better than others | 5 | |
| To the point/quick | 4 | |
| Simulation meeting (n=100) | Good information/good case/informative | 47 |
| Realistic | 10 | |
| Incorporated all team members/good to see what other bring/good to learn to work in team | 6 | |
| Learnt a lot about falls prevention | 4 | |
| Volunteer assessment and team care planning (n=124) | Showed importance of team approach/learnt from other professions about interventions/good team | 60 |
| Enjoyed/good/helpful/valuable | 34 | |
| Low risk volunteer not beneficial to learning | 4 | |
| Need more organisation | 4 | |
| Most beneficial part (n=132) | Volunteer portion/applying what we learnt/critical thinking | 70 |
| Working as a team | 48 | |
| Simulation | 13 | |
| Skill posters | 8 | |
| Feedback/debrief/group discussion | 5 | |
| Recommendations for future events | None (actual response) | 31 |
| Better explanation of what will happen at event | 12 | |
| Increase time for event, more time for volunteer interview | 7, 5 | |
| Ensure all groups have all professions represented | 6 | |
| Stay on schedule | 5 | |
| Increase space for posters | 4 | |
| Other comments | Great course/learnt a lot/good learning experience/informative/excellent/valuable/loved it/helpful/best team learning experience yet | 27 |
| Thank you | 10 | |
| Pleased/enjoyable/fun/wonderful/glad I came | 13 | |
| Good to work with other professions/makes me want to work in team setting | 7 | |
| None (actual response) | 5 | |
| I feel I can help prevent falls | 4 |
*Note that students may have written more than one comment, and all comments were included.