Gordon Morris, Fell Christopher W R, Box Helen, Farrell Michael, Stewart Alison
a Department of Medical Education , Blackpool Victoria Hospital , Blackpool , UK.
b School of Medicine and Dentistry , University of Central Lancashire , Preston , UK.
Med Educ Online. 2017;22(1):1272838. doi: 10.1080/10872981.2017.1272838.
Healthcare increasingly recognises and focusses on the phenomena of 'safe practice' and 'patient safety.' Success with non-technical skills (NTS) training in other industries has led to widespread transposition to healthcare education, with communication and teamwork skills central to NTS frameworks.
This study set out to identify how the context of interprofessional simulation learning influences NTS acquisition and development of 'safety' amongst learners.
Participants receiving a non-technical skills (NTS) safety focussed training package were invited to take part in a focus group interview which set out to explore communication, teamwork, and the phenomenon of safety in the context of the learning experiences they had within the training programme. The analysis was aligned with a constructivist paradigm and took an interactive methodological approach. The analysis proceeded through three stages, consisting of open, axial, and selective coding, with constant comparisons taking place throughout each phase. Each stage provided categories that could be used to explore the themes of the data. Additionally, to ensure thematic saturation, transcripts of observed simulated learning encounters were then analysed.
Six themes were established at the axial coding level, i.e., analytical skills, personal behaviours, communication, teamwork, context, and pedagogy. Underlying these themes, two principal concepts emerged, namely: intergroup contact anxiety - as both a result of and determinant of communication - and teamwork, both of which must be considered in relation to context. These concepts have subsequently been used to propose a framework for NTS learning.
This study highlights the role of intergroup contact anxiety and teamwork as factors in NTS behaviour and its dissipation through interprofessional simulation learning. Therefore, this should be a key consideration in NTS education. Future research is needed to consider the role of the affective non-technical attributes of intergroup contact anxiety and teamwork as focuses for education and determinants of safe behaviour.
AUM: Anxiety/uncertainty management; NTS: Non-technical skills; TINSELS: Training in non-technical skills to enhance levels of medicines safety.
医疗保健领域越来越认识到并关注“安全实践”和“患者安全”现象。其他行业非技术技能(NTS)培训的成功促使其广泛应用于医疗保健教育,沟通和团队合作技能是NTS框架的核心。
本研究旨在确定跨专业模拟学习环境如何影响学习者的NTS获取以及“安全”意识的培养。
邀请接受以非技术技能(NTS)安全为重点的培训包的参与者参加焦点小组访谈,探讨他们在培训计划中的学习经历背景下的沟通、团队合作和安全现象。分析采用建构主义范式,并采用交互式方法。分析分三个阶段进行,包括开放编码、轴心编码和选择性编码,每个阶段都进行持续比较。每个阶段都提供了可用于探索数据主题的类别。此外,为确保主题饱和度,随后对观察到的模拟学习过程的记录进行了分析。
在轴心编码层面确定了六个主题,即分析技能、个人行为、沟通、团队合作、环境和教学法。在这些主题之下,出现了两个主要概念,即:群体间接触焦虑——既是沟通的结果,也是沟通的决定因素——以及团队合作,这两者都必须结合环境来考虑。这些概念随后被用于提出一个NTS学习框架。
本研究强调了群体间接触焦虑和团队合作作为NTS行为的因素及其通过跨专业模拟学习消散的作用。因此,这应该是NTS教育中的一个关键考虑因素。未来的研究需要考虑群体间接触焦虑和团队合作的情感非技术属性作为教育重点和安全行为决定因素的作用。
AUM:焦虑/不确定性管理;NTS:非技术技能;TINSELS:非技术技能培训以提高药物安全水平