An interprofessional training to improve advance care planning skills among medicine, nursing, and social work students

2020 
Abstract Suboptimal training for healthcare students is a recognized barrier to successful completion of advance care planning (ACP) with patients and families. Our study sought to enhance ACP knowledge and communication skills for interprofessional healthcare students. During academic year 2017–2018, 46 students (19-medicine, 16-nursing, and 11-social work), received three training modules delivered by interprofessional faculty. Students subsequently observed a clinical ACP encounter attended by a patient and their family, a clinical social worker, and an internal medicine resident. Three surveys (pre-training T1, post-training T2, and post-clinical encounter T3) evaluated change in student knowledge, communication self-efficacy, ACP self-efficacy, and interprofessional teamwork (using SPICE-R). A randomized waitlist approach was used to test the effects of the clinical ACP training. Student attendance and engagement were high. Relative to baseline, all outcomes differed at all data collection intervals (p   0.05). ACP self-efficacy scores declined at T2 before improving at T3. Communication self-efficacy was lower at T2 but improved at T3. Teamwork improved with a medium-large effect (ES = 0.75) at T2 and a large effect (ES = 1.00) at T3. Participant knowledge of ACP improved overall (p  Preliminary findings indicate the interprofessional training experience enhanced student communication skills, ACP knowledge, and appreciation for team-based care. T2 findings demonstrate decrease in communication and ACP self-efficacy, perhaps suggesting students initially underestimated ACP complexity and overestimated their ability to communicate about ACP. T3 findings further suggest that students ultimately benefited from the training experience with meaningful improvements on all key outcomes.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    15
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []