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SPACED EDUCATION Hospital Skills Program. Assoc Prof Tim Shaw, Director Workforce Education & Development Group (WEDG), The University of Sydney James Nicholson, Educational Development Manager, WEDG, The University of Sydney Dr Anna DiMarco, Director of Training, Hospital Skills Program
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SPACED EDUCATION Hospital Skills Program Assoc Prof Tim Shaw, Director Workforce Education & Development Group (WEDG), The University of Sydney James Nicholson, Educational Development Manager, WEDG, The University of Sydney Dr Anna DiMarco, Director of Training, Hospital Skills Program SES & IS Local Health Districts
The Challenge ‘Traditional types of CME have only a modest impact on clinician’s knowledge retention and clinical behaviour’ Cochrane Database of Systematic Review 2009(2) Forsetlund et al
JMO Context • Vulnerable • Workloads, inexperience and competing learning opportunities potentially places the JMO at increased risk of being involved in adverse outcomes • Gen Y and Z enjoy electronic based media
HSP Context • Enhance the HSP workshops by reinforcing learning objectives • Impacts on HSP participant knowledge and behaviour • Is quick to complete • Supports objectives of patient safety and governance
Spaced Education – in a nutshell • Only takes a few minutes each day • Course is spread out over a period of weeks • Proven in randomised trials to improve knowledge retention and improve behaviour better than traditional online learning • Works extremely well on smart-phones (optimised for iPhone, Android and BlackBerry) or a desktop computer.
Spaced Education is a novel form of evidence based online education based on 2 core psychological research findings of spacing and testing effects
A novel approach • The testing effect • The spacing effect
Spacing effect – refers to the finding that educational encounters repeated over time leads to knowledge acquisition and retention
Testing effect – refers to the finding that ‘the process of testing’ measures knowledge and alters the learning processes to significantly improve knowledge retention
Each Spaced Ed Case Study consists of an:1. Educative component eg MCQ2. Evaluative component (correct answer and feedback with a detailed explanation of correct and incorrect answers) 3. Spaced Ed item is repeated – fixed number of times
Vol 211, No 3, September 2010 Kerfoot et al Spaced Education Generates Skill Transfer
Vol 211, No 3, September 2010 Kerfoot et al Spaced Education Generates Skill Transfer
Vol 211, No 3, September 2010 Kerfoot et al Spaced Education Generates Skill Transfer
Vol 211, No 3, September 2010 Kerfoot et al Spaced Education Generates Skill Transfer
HSP Program – Spaced Ed • 2 x 20 Spaced Ed Cases • Post test evaluation survey • Not a randomised control trial • Behavioural changes not examined
Aims Case studies which reinforce previous LBOSs Child – Elbow Pain A 6 year old child presents with a painful elbow after an unwitnessed injury. Attached is his X-ray: Which of the following is most correct? A. There is no obvious injury and so a pulled elbow is likely B. The medial epicondyle is displaced suggesting an avulsion fracture C. There is no evidence of a fat pad sign, so a soft tissue injury is likely D. The x-rays are inadequate and further views are needed Answer D
Take home message When assessing an injury understand the signs of possible injury, but ensure you have the appropriate view to make your assessment. In this case the x-rays are inadequate and further views are needed. Feedback Pulled elbows do not require x-rays and are diagnosed with an appropriate history (remember that 50% of pulled elbows DO NOT give a history of being pulled), and an examination that generally has no area of tenderness or upper limb joint dysfunction, other than a reluctance to, and stress associated with, attempted gentle pro and supination of the forearm. It is rare over the age of 5 to suffer a pulled elbow. A 6 year old should have 3 ossification centres – capitellum, radius, medial epicondyle. These x-rays confirm these are present. A child over the age of 5 year old should not have the medial epicondyle visible on an adequate lateral x-ray. An adequate lateral x-ray should have the ‘hour glass’ sign visible at the lower end of the humerus. These xrays suggest the medial epicondyle is posteriorly displaced, but the view is NOT an adequate lateral as the hourglass is absent. Normally on a lateral view of the elbow flexed in 90° a fat pad is seen on the anterior aspect of the joint. This is normal fat located in the joint capsule. Normallyon the posterior side no fat pad is seen since the posterior fat is located within the deep intercondylar fossa. Distention of the joint with blood from an injury will cause the anterior fat pad to become elevated and/or the posterior fat pad to become visible. An elevated anterior lucency and/or a visible posterior lucency on a true lateral radiographof an elbow flexed at 90° is described as a positive fat pad sign. This patient does not have a true lateral, so it is difficult to comment. Below is a true lateral Xray demonstrating 1. ‘Hour glass’ sign at distal end humerus. 2. Pathological anterior fat pad (enlarged, ‘Sail sign’) 3. Posterior fat pad (usually not present). 4. Breach in anterior cortex of distal humerus. 5. Posterior angulation of distal humerus. 6. Appropriate hidden position of medial epicondyle.
That is with an adequate lateral there are a number of true pathological signs consistent with a supracondylar fracture, and the loss of a false +ve medial epicondyle displacement.
Case Study which reinforce recommendations of CEC • Septic Shock 4 • Cognitive errors • Triage errors • Momentum • Source: CDRS (Cognitive Dispositions To Respond) (Profiles In Patient Safety:”A Perfect Storm” in the Emergency Department (Samuel G.Campbell,Pat Croskerry,William Bond:Academic Emergency Medicine 2007) can steer a physicians cognitive processes and provide impediments to patient safety and need to be managed within the context of working on a busy ED shift.
Case Study which reinforce recommendations of Safety & Governance Committees In 2009, the Clinical Excellence Commission published a Clinical focus Report after a review of IIMs NSW data showed 167 incidents in 18 months. As a result of this report, the CEC joined the ECI (Emergency Care Institute) and the agency for Clinical Innovation in developing the sepsis pathway. See link for further resources to the sepsis pathway www.cec.health.nsw.gov.au/programs/sepsis.
Evaluation – Completion (defined by answering each case study correctly twice) • 60 doctors have started the course • Completed: 38 (63.3%) • Still Working through: 5 (8.3%) • Off track – unlikely to complete: 17 (28.3%)
Qstream (Formerly Spaced Education) • Free Public Siteapp.qstream.com • Enterprise sites
Creating a Qstream Course • Simple to create a quick Qstream course BUT… • Creating an interesting, engaging and useful eLearning experience is never simple • Relevance • Levels of learning – remembering vs understanding vs analysing … (Bloom’s Taxonomy) • Good Multiple Choice Questions • Media – images, videos, sounds …