1 / 30

Evaluating Readiness: Course Content and Program Evaluation Bioterrorism Training and Curriculum Development Program Sep

Evaluating Readiness: Course Content and Program Evaluation Bioterrorism Training and Curriculum Development Program September 21, 2004. Lynn Rothberg Wegman, M.P.A. Director, Division of State, Community, & Public Health (DSCPH) Bureau of Health Professions (BHPr)

tansy
Download Presentation

Evaluating Readiness: Course Content and Program Evaluation Bioterrorism Training and Curriculum Development Program Sep

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evaluating Readiness:Course Content and Program EvaluationBioterrorism Training and Curriculum Development ProgramSeptember 21, 2004 Lynn Rothberg Wegman, M.P.A. Director, Division of State, Community, & Public Health (DSCPH) Bureau of Health Professions (BHPr) Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)

  2. Evaluation • Varying levels of evaluation • Individual health care provider’s level of preparedness • Is each individual course/module an effective training tool? • Is each grantee effective in overall training strategy for the geographic area? • Is the national BTCDP an effective means of training the Nation’s health care providers? • Ultimate question: Are the Nation’s health care providers better prepared to respond in an emergency?

  3. Preparedness Needs of Healthcare Workforce • True need vs. perceived need • Training • Drills/Exercises • Retention/re-training • Level of competencies- who needs to know what? • Everyone needs to have basic level of training- who needs intermediate or advanced (who determines the need), how should it be delivered? • HCPs have different roles in different states

  4. Issues to Consider in Training the Healthcare Workforce • Important to evaluate what’s working and what’s not working and why • Take developed courses and modify them for the audience • Different states, different institutions have different needs and procedures to provide training • Coordinate drills with HRSA Hosp Prep, DHS, and CDC as an evaluation strategy • JCAHO will allow tabletop drills as long as the community is brought into it • Full scale vs. tabletop drills

  5. Issues to Consider in Training the Healthcare Workforce (cont’d) • Need evaluators trained to observe drills • Students (CD) should be involved in simulations rather than drills • Can learn from large scale drill if you can evaluate it properly (have enough staff, etc.) • Practicing HCPs don’t necessarily want public health-focused training and competencies

  6. How Do We Measure Preparedness? Possible options to consider: • Core Competencies • 15 potential DHS scenarios of biological, chemical, nuclear, natural disasters, etc. • Universal Task List of general needs to respond to the 15 scenarios (not details of how to respond) • CDC’s 19 preparedness topics • Columbia’s Hospital Workforce competencies

  7. Curriculum Development Perspective

  8. CD Core Content • What level of training is required for health professions students? • Defined by the future role of each health care provider serving in an emergency • Basic competencies for all health care providers vs. targeted, advanced competencies for specific groups of providers • “Must knows” for all core concepts • Add discipline-specific material (same topics but varying levels of knowledge)

  9. CD Evaluation • How are competencies being measured? • Competencies defined as a measurable skill/knowledge • Areas of student evaluation (pre and post tests): • Cognitive knowledge of preparedness • Attitudes toward preparedness • Prior exposure to preparedness content • National health professions licensing exams: what questions relate to emergency preparedness? • CE requirements- one state requires 2 hours of CE on emergency preparedness for licensure renewal • Problem-based learning (core) • Schools creating own evaluation

  10. CD Program Evaluation • Needs Assessment • Course Content Validity • Faculty Evaluation and Development • Course Evaluation: for faculty, students, and instructional technology methods

  11. Continuing Education Perspective

  12. CE Content • There should be a basic core program that leads to more detailed or advanced training • What are the real basics that everyone needs to know? • Role • Piggyback on training on requirements (like JCAHO requirements on training for all workers) • Practicing professionals want to know what their responsibilities are and not all nuances about diseases

  13. CE Content • Need to provide training for health professionals; not just first responder training • Match local training needs to national goals • Tiered educational programs are part of the answer • Just in Time training to help combat burn-out on terrorism preparedness training • Need to refer back to the four program goals in designing/developing content

  14. CE Content • ½ doing NIMS; all doing HEICS • ½ doing “in depth” courses • All doing broad spectrum training • More than ½ are part of a state strategy for training healthcare professionals; all believe they should be part of a comprehensive state strategy

  15. Evaluation: Competencies • Have to be based on training needs analysis for each group of trainees • CE grantees develop their own competencies based on variety of available competency sets • Competencies and objectives are derived from needs assessments • ½ of CE awardees believe no single set of national competencies exist that are easily adaptable to state and local needs • Curricula in the CE program use competencies drawn from a variety of sources: ODP/ERG, ACEP, CDC/Columbia, ASTM, etc.

  16. Evaluation: Competencies • Competencies should not be developed without including appropriate groups: accrediting bodies, professional associations, federal agencies, provider groups • Everyone believes there needs to be consensus on national preparedness competencies for basic level training • Competencies must be broadly defined at national level, but with specifics developed at awardee level

  17. Evaluation: Courses • Pre/Post testing alone is not sufficient • Tiered approach to evaluation • Future follow-up testing alone may not be sufficient to determine knowledge/competencies • Basic competencies “re-delivered” may be better than evaluations of retention of specifics

  18. Evaluation: BTCDP Program • How can we help HRSA determine whether we have met the four program goals? • National impact: • Numbers trained by discipline • Contact hours • Geographic region • Population served • Special populations • By describing how we are helping the state meet preparedness goals

  19. BTCDPQuestionnaire

  20. CE Awardees Are you implementing a basic emergency preparedness orientation course? Number of CE Awardees: 19 Number of CE Respondents: 17 Number of Yes Responses: 16

  21. Data from CE Awardees

  22. Data from CE Awardees

  23. CE Awardees Are you using core competencies in your bioterrorism and emergency preparedness courses? Number of CE Awardees: 19 Number of CE Respondents: 17 Number of Yes Responses: 14

  24. CE Awardees Have you conducted any community-based drills as part of your curriculum or course content? Number of CE Awardees: 19 Number of CE Respondents: 17 Number of Yes Responses: 8

  25. CD Awardees Are you implementing a basic emergency preparedness orientation course? Number of CD Awardees:13 Number of CD Respondents: 13 Number of Yes Responses: 8

  26. Data from CD Awardees

  27. Data FromCD Awardees

  28. CD Awardees Are you using core competencies in your bioterrorism and emergency preparedness courses? Number of CD Awardees: 13 Number of CD Respondents: 13 Number of Yes Responses: 12

  29. CD Awardees Have you conducted any community-based drills as part of your curriculum or course content? Number of CD Awardees: 13 Number of CD Respondents: 13 Number of Yes Responses: 3

  30. Thank You Contact Information: Lynn Rothberg Wegman, M.P.A. Director, Division of State, Community & Public Health, HRSA, BHPr 301-443-1648 lwegman@hrsa.gov

More Related