| New ways of thinking | Student: It forces you to learn on the spot…the cues you would usually use in person probably are not going to work when you cannot assess a person when you're right there with them…it just forces you to think a bit “outside the box” about your language and communication you're using. #S1-5
Clinical Educator: This cohort will be more flexible and adaptable and they'll probably be open to trying new things and doing new things because they've seen it. Hopefully, they've got a broader concept of what the profession is and what the options are to them. #CE1-4
Placement Co-ordinator: It has got us thinking ‘outside the box', and actually the whole COVID has, and it has also potentially given us some ideas on expanding placements and potentially different placements in the future. So, from a curriculum point of view we are in a situation where we often have more students than we have placements, telehealth is giving us some ideas across the country as to how we can increase placements. #PC2-1
Client: If you said you didn't have a particular piece of equipment there was discussion around what could be the alternative, how it could be used and what you would need to do to make sure that you were getting the same effect that was intended. I mean, it was not an ideal world, but it actually ended up being pretty, pretty dam good. #C1-3 |
| Changed practices | Student: We did a home assessment on somebody who was experiencing freezing, and it's really hard to explain, but basically in the clinic we can give them all the strategies we want, but if they do not practice it or try it at home, it won't make a difference. Being able to use a video, and they show us exactly where they're freezing, and then give them a strategy to use, I think that was a huge thing that we'd never even really considered before, and I think that's something they could even implement into their service. Even though everyone's come back to the clinic, if someone was struggling with that at home, that was something they could give as an assessment. I feel like it just opened up a new area that we could work in as well. # S1-1
Clinical Educator: One of the unexpected benefits was being able to use telehealth as a secure way for students to observe. I had a couple of occasions where I had students who were unable to come into the clinic, it was COVID related, and we were able to set them up on telehealth on a university device from home so they were able to perhaps be observing sessions so they weren't missing out. #CE2-3
Placement Co-ordinator: For us it was also focusing on “hands-off” treatment which is becoming better evidence-based. There's a lot of reliance on “hands-on” treatment, and patients are wanting “hands-on” treatment, whereas the evidence, especially when it comes to persistent pain, for example, is a lot more “hands-off,” and getting that message through. I mean we spend most of our curriculum teaching students “hands-on” stuff, and in the real world there's a lot of “hands-off” stuff. So, I think that was actually another good point that came up quite surprisingly. #PC2-1
Client: [The educator] occasionally wired me up for a week with her exercise tracker and that's a great motivator when you know that someone's going to sort of download your data after a week. #C1-2 |
| Future visions | Student: I just completed an internship with some private practice dietitians, and just being able to observe the different types of clients that they're able to reach using telehealth which also extended to reaching clients overseas, in different time zones and all of that, to be able to educate people and connect with them, just over telehealth. #S1-2
Clinical Educator: I think we are going to produce graduates who are comfortable using telehealth and familiar with it, and that's changing views. It certainly changed my view about using telehealth and the accessibility of that and being willing to offer that. I'd be interested to see if that has good effects in the future for rolling out rural health and making services more accessible…in psychology especially we're thinking like, can we advertise further afield if we're offering telehealth to have more clients if we're offering a service rather than just in the local region. #CE1-3
Placement Co-ordinator: We shouldn't be willing to give up on these valuable experiences learnt during this time. We have to make sure that we keep these valuable skills, and use them even after the pandemic. PC#1-3
Client: Now that we know that telehealth is in existence, we know it works, even once people have been discharged from their clinics, to be able to have a telehealth from time to time, to ensure that even though you're now discharged you're staying on program, that there will be an ongoing connection and a concern about the things that are continuing to progress, that kind of seems to me as though now we have this platform that works well and that maybe a way to continue a service into the future. #C1-2 |