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Pediatric End-of-Life Care Skills Workshop: A Novel, Deliberate Practice Approach.

Authors :
Scheurer, Johannah M.
Norbie, Erik
Bye, Jeffrey K.
Villacis-Calderon, Daniela
Heith, Catherine
Woll, Anne
Shu, Dannell
McManimon, Kelly
Kamrath, Heidi
Goloff, Naomi
Source :
Academic Pediatrics; Jul2023, Vol. 23 Issue 5, p860-865, 6p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Pediatric end of life (EOL) care skills are a high acuity, low occurrence skill set required by pediatric clinicians. Gaps in education and competence for this specialized care can lead to suboptimal patient care and clinician distress when caring for dying patients and their families. METHODS: A half-day workshop using a deliberate practice approach was designed by an inter-professional workgroup including bereaved parent consultants. Pediatric fellows (neonatal-perinatal medicine, critical care, hematology oncology, blood and marrow transplant) and advanced practice providers learned and practiced EOL skills in a safe simulation environment with instruction from interprofessional facilitators and standardized patients. Participant perceived competence (self-efficacy) was measured before, immediately-post, and 3 months post workshop. RESULTS: There were 28 first-time (of 34 total) participants in 4 pilot workshops. Participants reported significantly increased self-efficacy post-workshop for 6 of 9 ratings, which was sustained 3 months afterwards. Most (92%, n = 22 of 24 respondents) reported incorporating the workshop training into clinical practice at 3-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: With early success of the pilot workshops, future iterative work includes expanding workshops to earlier, interprofessional learners and collecting validity evidence for a competency-based performance checklist tool. A project website (https://z.umn.edu/PECS) was developed for local and collaborative efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18762859
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Academic Pediatrics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174989735
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2022.11.006