Engaging a Community Chaplaincy Resource for Interprofessional Health Care Provider Training in Facilitating Family Decision Making for Children at End-of-Life.
2019
: Coordinating the care of terminally ill children is difficult for both parents and the health care team. An underutilized resource is spiritual care, such as that provided by Pacific Health Ministry, a community-based nonprofit established to develop hospital ministry training programs in Hawai'i and provide chaplaincy services to local facilities. This paper describes a training exercise, called the Pediatric Interprofessional Program (PIPP), which is modeled after an adult program, the Hawai'i Interprofessional Training for End of Life Communication in the intensive care unit (HITEC-ICU). Both programs were developed to introduce teams of learners consisting of Pacific Health Ministry spiritual care residents, internal medicine or pediatric residents, undergraduate students in nursing, and graduate students in social work to techniques in delivering serious, life-altering information, and the dynamics of working as an interprofessional team through use of progressively unfolding clinical simulations. PIPP facilitators included chaplaincy instructors at Pacific Health Ministry, university faculty, and community practitioners in pediatrics, nursing, and social work. The simulations were conducted at the Translational Health Science Simulation Center (THSSC) of the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa (UHM) School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene (SONDH), with simulated patients from the HealthCAST (Collaborative Acting Simulation Training) program, a collaborative agreement between SONDH and the UHM Department of Theatre and Dance. The training is ongoing, but has thus far demonstrated that interprofessional education programs are feasible across community, academic, and clinical lines, and benefit from the engagement of community resources.
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