Document Version Pre-print: The original manuscript sent to the publisher. The article has not yet been reviewed or amended.

Similar documents
GENERAL INFORMATION STUDIES DEGREE PROGRAMME PERIOD OF EXECUTION SCOPE DESCRIPTION LANGUAGE OF STUDY CODE DEGREE

Improving recruitment, hiring, and retention practices for VA psychologists: An analysis of the benefits of Title 38

Providing Feedback to Learners. A useful aide memoire for mentors

E35 RE-DISCOVER CAREERS AND EDUCATION THROUGH 2020

MSE 5301, Interagency Disaster Management Course Syllabus. Course Description. Prerequisites. Course Textbook. Course Learning Objectives

Pharmaceutical Medicine

The Incentives to Enhance Teachers Teaching Profession: An Empirical Study in Hong Kong Primary Schools

Submission of a Doctoral Thesis as a Series of Publications

THE BROOKDALE HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER ONE BROOKDALE PLAZA BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11212

CORE CURRICULUM FOR REIKI

Accommodation for Students with Disabilities

Preparing for Medical School

Nottingham Trent University Course Specification

Building our Profession s Future: Level I Fieldwork Education. Kari Williams, OTR, MS - ACU Laurie Stelter, OTR, MA - TTUHSC

Bachelor of International Hospitality Management

Conditions of study and examination regulations of the. European Master of Science in Midwifery

Academic Freedom Intellectual Property Academic Integrity

The development of our plan began with our current mission and vision statements, which follow. "Enhancing Louisiana's Health and Environment"

03/07/15. Research-based welfare education. A policy brief

Social Work Simulation Education in the Field

What s in Your Communication Toolbox? COMMUNICATION TOOLBOX. verse clinical scenarios to bolster clinical outcomes: 1

Statement on short and medium-term absence(s) from training: Requirements for notification and potential impact on training progression for dentists

LEt s GO! Workshop Creativity with Mockups of Locations

Response to the Review of Modernising Medical Careers

Bold resourcefulness: redefining employability and entrepreneurial learning

Bachelor of International Hospitality Management, BA IHM. Course curriculum National and Institutional Part

Tomball College and Community Library Occupational Therapy Journals

Hungary. Iván Rónai Ministry of Cultural Heritage

2. Related Documents (refer to policies.rutgers.edu for additional information)

COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY 748 ADVANCED THEORY OF GROUP COUNSELING WINTER, 2016

Planning a research project

Objectives. INACSL Standard (2016) 5/15/2017. Debriefing Process Meeting the National Standard

CLINICAL TRAINING AGREEMENT

Consultation skills teaching in primary care TEACHING CONSULTING SKILLS * * * * INTRODUCTION

Master of Philosophy. 1 Rules. 2 Guidelines. 3 Definitions. 4 Academic standing

THE EDUCATION COMMITTEE ECVCP

Joint Board Certification Project Team

Strategic Plan Revised November 2012 Reviewed and Updated July 2014

What do Medical Students Need to Learn in Their English Classes?

Interprofessional educational team to develop communication and gestural skills

Library services & information retrieval

Pathways to Health Professions of the Future

UIC HEALTH SCIENCE COLLEGES

900 Point Breakthrough Leading Hen TOEIC TEST Level Different Matter Collection (level Different Matter Collection Series) (2011) ISBN:

Kannapolis City Schools 100 DENVER STREET KANNAPOLIS, NC

The Political Engagement Activity Student Guide

Academic Integrity RN to BSN Option Student Tutorial

Spreadsheet software UBU104 F/502/4625 VRQ. Learner name: Learner number:

LLP NL-ERASMUS-ECDEM

Mayo School of Health Sciences. Clinical Pastoral Education Residency. Rochester, Minnesota.

ALAMO CITY OPHTHALMOLOGY

Constructing Blank Cloth Dolls to Assess Sewing Skills: A Service Learning Project

INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS

The Diversity of STEM Majors and a Strategy for Improved STEM Retention

Promoting open access to research results

Alyson D. Stover, MOT, JD, OTR/L, BCP

Innovative e-learning approach in teaching based on case studies - INNOCASE project.

Bachelor of Engineering in Biotechnology

Productive partnerships to promote media and information literacy for knowledge societies: IFLA and UNESCO s collaborative work

Partnership Agreement

HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION

Office of Student Financial Aid and Scholarship College of Nursing

James Cook University

Pharmaceutical Medicine as a Specialised Discipline of Medicine

Information and Instructions

Qualification Guidance

Baker College Waiver Form Office Copy Secondary Teacher Preparation Mathematics / Social Studies Double Major Bachelor of Science

Mayo School of Health Sciences. Clinical Pastoral Education Internship. Rochester, Minnesota.

MASTER S COURSES FASHION START-UP

Qualification handbook

Published in: The Proceedings of the 12th International Congress on Mathematical Education

UNIVERSITY OF THESSALY DEPARTMENT OF EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION POSTGRADUATE STUDIES INFORMATION GUIDE

Section 1: Program Design and Curriculum Planning

BHA 4053, Financial Management in Health Care Organizations Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course Textbook. Course Learning Outcomes.

Collecting dialect data and making use of them an interim report from Swedia 2000

Higher education is becoming a major driver of economic competitiveness

You said we did. Report on improvements being made to Children s and Adolescent Mental Health Services. December 2014

University of Huddersfield Repository

SUNY Downstate Medical Center Brooklyn, NY

Pediatric Wheelchair Seating

Department of Communication Promotion and Tenure Criteria Guidelines. Teaching

Note: Principal version Modification Amendment Modification Amendment Modification Complete version from 1 October 2014

MBA6941, Managing Project Teams Course Syllabus. Course Description. Prerequisites. Course Textbook. Course Learning Objectives.

UoS - College of Business Administration. Master of Business Administration (MBA)

Core Strategy #1: Prepare professionals for a technology-based, multicultural, complex world

The Netherlands. Jeroen Huisman. Introduction

Nursing Students Conception of Clinical Skills Training Before and After Their First Clinical Placement. Solveig Struksnes RN, MSc Senior lecturer

Thought and Suggestions on Teaching Material Management Job in Colleges and Universities Based on Improvement of Innovation Capacity

Systematic reviews in theory and practice for library and information studies

Digital Network as a Learning Tool for Health Sciences Students

Sample Letter Of Teamwork Recommendation

IMPACTFUL, QUANTIFIABLE AND TRANSFORMATIONAL?

HSMP 6611 Strategic Management in Health Care (Strg Mgmt in Health Care) Fall 2012 Thursday 5:30 7:20 PM Ed 2 North, 2301

ACCREDITATION STANDARDS

FOUNDATION IN SCIENCE

Paramedic Science Program

5.7 Course Descriptions

COLLEGE OF INTEGRATED CHINESE MEDICINE ADMISSIONS POLICY

Helping Students Get to Where Ideas Can Find Them

HARPER ADAMS UNIVERSITY Programme Specification

Transcription:

Danish University Colleges Integrating communication skills training in the curricula of 5 healthcare professions: nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, radiography and midwifery Nielsen, Annegrethe; Tørring, Birgitte; Hansen, Susanne Hjorth Published in: MedEd Publish Publication date: 2014 Document Version Pre-print: The original manuscript sent to the publisher. The article has not yet been reviewed or amended. Link to publication Citation for pulished version (APA): Nielsen, A., Tørring, B., & Hansen, S. H. (2014). Integrating communication skills training in the curricula of 5 healthcare professions: nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, radiography and midwifery. MedEd Publish. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal Download policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 07. Jan. 2018

Integrating communication skills training in the curricula of 5 healthcare professions: nursing, occupational therapy, physical therapy, radiography and midwifery Authors: Annegrethe Nielsen, MA, PhD, senior lecturer, Birgitte Tørring, RN, Educational Consultant, PhD student and Susanne Hjorth Hansen, Registered Radiographer, Master of ICT & Learning, PhD student, senior lecturer all University College of North Denmark Corresponding author: Annegrethe Nielsen, University College North Denmark, Selma Lagerløfsvej 2, 9220 Aalborg Ø, Denmark, phone #: +45 72690976, e-mail: ann@ucn.dk Abstract: Structured training of communication skills are needed in undergraduate healthcare education in order to prepare the future professionals to cooperate with patients. Often education in communication is not integrated in the curriculum making it seem a side activity of less importance for professionals. In the effort of integrating communication skills training in the undergraduate curricula of nursing, radiography, occupational therapy, physiotherapy and midwifery, we established a communication skills laboratory and arranged a 5 day course for communication teachers from all 5 educational programs at University College North Denmark. After the course communication skills training was offered at least once during every 3½ year program and after 3 years this is retained and in some cases developed further. The combination of getting a room where to train and developing the skills to train the students made it feasible to make communication skills training part of the curriculum in all 5 health care education programs. Practice points: Having a dedicated communication skills laboratory enhance the opportunity of communication skills being trained Teaching facilitator skills in a learner centered way helps teachers to imagine how communication skills training could be a valuable contribution to their educational program and how it would best fit in Making resources and facilitation skills available encourage teachers to experiment with communication skills training and ongoing support helps them develop their teaching further

Introduction Contemporary healthcare embraces the importance of effective and satisfactory cooperation between healthcare professionals and patients. Good communication is essential for the quality of the cooperation and allows implementation of treatment and care that suit the needs of the patient best. The educational system for professionals in Denmark has not been focused very much on communication as a competence to be learned through undergraduate education - the ability to communicate efficiently with patients is often viewed as an untouchable personal trait that some people just happen to possess or have developed through their pre-professional lives. This is also the case for the future professionals we educate at University College North Denmark: nurses, occupational therapists, physical therapists, radiographers and midwives. And even though postgraduate courses on communication are offered, they rarely concern themselves with how the professionals develop their communication skills further in professional life practice situations. However research shows that the ability to perform better in professional communication can be taught and that the most efficient way to do so is to apply both theoretical introduction, reflection on own communicative performance and structured skills training (Kurtz et al. 2005, Simmenroth-Nayda et al. 2012). This article will give an account of how structured training of communication skills was integrated in the five undergraduate educational curricula at University College of North Denmark. All curricula contained small parts of communication education before, but none of them had integrated skills training. At the same time effort was put into establishing communication skills training in the postgraduate courses offered by University College North Denmark. To try to encourage integration of communication skills training in the curricula a communication laboratory was established in 2010 and a training program for the teachers was offered in 2011. Establishing the communication skills laboratory Following an evaluation of a communication course for midwifes in 2006-2007 in which video and group discussions were used as a means to engage communication theory in developing practical communication skills in the midwifery practice, we went in 2008 on a visit to Cambridge University where integration of structured communication skills training has been used for some time in the medical school. The visit to the medical school s communication skills laboratories at Cambridge University showed us the impact of having dedicated rooms for communication training, a structured communication training curriculum, trained facilitators and a group of simulated patients to be able to simulate different kinds of medical problems and living conditions. In this spirit we started to work for the establishment of a communication skills training laboratory at the University College North Denmark. The reason for this first move was a preconception of the importance of having a space for communication skills training in the university college. The existence of a dedicated room for communication training, we expected, would enhance the possibility that communication skills would actually be trained because space otherwise clearly would be wasted a reasoning we still believe to be valid. In the spring of 2010 the room was sat up and a small group of professional actors were engaged to be used as simulated patients. Also the Calgary-

Cambridge guide was translated into Danish and a few specific training guides were made in order to increase accessibility of the training resources. The facilitator course The course was designed for teachers in the healthcare professions at University College North Denmark who were interested in teaching communication with patients to their students or teachers who were already doing so. The intension was to show them how to use the resources in the communication skills laboratory and to give them an opportunity to develop some of the basic facilitator skills under supervision. The course was offered in the spring of 2011. Facilitators were Birgitte Tørring who had been at Cambridge University for observation and later for a facilitator course and Annegrethe Nielsen who had also been visiting Cambridge University and later has been involved in different facilitator training activities. Susanne Hjorth Hansen was one of the participating teachers already teaching communication to students and eager to learn about the new opportunities. The duration of the course was five full days organized as four consecutive days and one more day after two month. In order to facilitate learning and create a reassuring working environment during the course, it was requested that the participants were able to take part in all the course s activities for the first four days this point being a challenge for many educational institutions as it turned out to be for us also. Still it is our conviction that it is important to try to create an atmosphere of commitment within the group of participants to encourage innovative and playful learning behavior. Participants were teachers from all five undergraduate programs plus two teachers working with postgraduate education of nurses and other healthcare professionals. Number of participants in the course was 15. 1 st day 2 nd day (small groups) Feedback how to make it helpful? Use of video and skills spotting (what should we teach the students?) Roleplaying and video as a tool for teaching Using simulated patients in training communication skills 3 rd day (small groups) Training of facilitation skills Training of facilitation skills 4 th day 5 th day (2 month later) Assessment of communication skills How to integrate training of communication skills in the curricula? Presentation of teaching plans from the programs Arrangement for networking and supportive activities Course content was as shown above an introduction to descriptive feedback, how to recognize communicative skills, working with video, working with actors as patients, training facilitator skills with a group and some of the options and problems involved in assessing communication skills. The form of the course was highly experiential and learner centered thus trying to model the most important facilitation skills in communication skills training. During the course it was interesting to observe how the communication teachers were able to integrate theories and knowledge of not only communication but also about the professions and the specific challenges their professions witness. The

professional tasks in for instance midwifery and occupational therapy will be different, but the recognition that the communicative skills used might very well be the same and that those skills could be named and trained, was eye-opening and encouraging for the participants. As a conclusion of the first 4 days all participants were encouraged to make a plan for implementation of communication skills training in their current curriculum. It was arranged that we should make a follow-up on this development 2 month later. At the 5th day of the course - 2 month later - almost all participants were planning to use communication skills training with their students and were in progress of implementing the training in their specific curriculum. All the participants found themselves to be prepared to and wanting to try to work with students in the experiential setting of the communication skills laboratory. As a support for this effort all the participants were offered to participate in network activities up to 4 times a year for discussion of problems and to maintain mutual encouragement and most of them did attend some of the network activities. Conclusion As a direct result of the establishment of the room and the later facilitator course all 5 undergraduate educations at the end of 2011 contained at least one communication skills training session for the students during the 3½ year long curriculum and this is still the status after 2 years. In some of the educational programs efforts have been made to take the training further by engaging more teachers and clinical supervisors in communication skills training. The establishment of a dedicated laboratory and the course for future facilitators seems in this case to be the key to awareness about the importance of communication skills training in the undergraduate education of nurses, occupational and physiotherapists, radiographers and midwives. Having a room provide space for training activities and having at the same time a group of trained facilitators and a group of actors willing to perform the roles of patients, makes it possible to include communication training in all 5 undergraduate programs at University College North Denmark. 3 years after the establishment of the laboratory the training activities are retained and some of the participating teachers have evolved even more training opportunities during this time. Discussion Working with communication skills in the laboratory provides an opportunity to focus on development of communication skills in a way that enables the professionals and the professionals to-be to work with problems in their professional practice in an environment of shared reflection and problem-solving. Also they have the opportunity to try out different approaches towards cooperation with the patients to reflect on their experiments with the help of video, practically and theoretically based reflection with the help of the group and the facilitator and the opportunity to try again with the help of the simulated patient. This approach is effective in the sense that it enhances learning of the skills (Silverman et al. 2013). Furthermore it helps creating an environment for professional reflection on problems in practice which can support further quality development in the field of healthcare services. The effort of integrating communication skills training in the curriculum of the professional educations may lead to greater understanding of how good communication with patients may contribute to better

problem-solving in the healthcare sector and thus encourage cooperation between patients and healthcare providers. References: Kurtz S, Silverman J, Draper J 2005. Teaching and Learning Communication Skills in Medicine, 2 nd edition. Radcliffe Publishing Silverman J, Kurtz S, Draper J 2013. Skills for Communicating with Patients, 3 rd edition. Radcliffe Publishing Simmenroth-Nayda A, Weiss C, Fischer T, Himmel W 2012. Do communication training programs improve students communication skills? a follow-up study. BMC Research Notes 2012, 5:486 Retrieved from: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1756-0500/5/486

Notes on contributors: ANNEGRETHE NIELSEN holds a MA in communication and a Ph.D. in educational studies. Since 1996 she has been teaching communication to midwifery students and different kinds of healthcare professionals. She has a position as a senior lecturer at the midwifery department at University College North Denmark. BIRGITTE TØRRING, RN, MHH, is currently working as an educational consultant focusing on organizational development and postgraduate education, and as PhD student focused on how relational coordination in the hospital operating room influences safety culture. Main interests: relational coordination, teamwork, communication and training communication skills, group processes and action research. SUSANNE HJORT HANSEN, RR, MIL is working as a lecturer focusing on healthcare communication. Her Ph.D. project investigates how patients and healthcare professionals can participate in development and use of ICT supported communication. Her main areas of interest are ICT supported communication and learning, action research and participatory design. Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the article.