Cole Michael A, Daniel Michelle, Chisolm-Straker Makini, Macias-Konstantopoulos Wendy, Alter Harrison, Stoklosa Hanni
Department of Emergency Medicine Michigan Medicine University of Michigan Medical School Ann Arbor MI.
Department of Emergency Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York NY.
AEM Educ Train. 2018 Dec 11;2(Suppl Suppl 1):S25-S30. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10206. eCollection 2018 Dec.
Emergency clinicians are on the frontlines of identifying and caring for trafficked persons. However, most emergency providers have never received training on trafficking, and studies report a significant knowledge gap involving this important topic. Workshops often employ a "train-the-trainer" model to address clinicians' knowledge gaps involving various topics (including trafficking). By offering participants knowledge and skills needed to both understand relevant content and teach this content to future learners, this model aims at promoting widespread dissemination of essential information. However, current train-the-trainer workshops typically involve full or multiday sessions and employ multimodal instructional techniques, making them time and resource intensive for both participants and facilitators. To address these challenges, we created a 50-minute train-the-trainer workshop to teach emergency clinicians the knowledge and skills needed to recognize and care for trafficked patients while providing instructional techniques to teach learners this content in the clinical environment. Learning theory and principles informed the choice of instructional methods and were employed when designing the paper-based learning guides that functioned as this intervention's primary instructional resource. Guides contained detailed scripts used to perform role-playing exercises. These "scripted guides" were designed for participants to learn important content while simultaneously practicing techniques to teach this content to one another. They provided the scaffolding necessary to independently direct learning during the workshop (with minimal facilitator intervention), while also being carefully formatted and organized to create an accessible tool for future use during clinical teaching. The session was implemented at the 2018 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Annual Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana. Based on participants' self-assessment using a retrospective pre-post test, the workshop was successful in creating a train-the-trainer model that is brief, requiring minimal facilitator resources and offers instruction on both content knowledge and instructional methods to disseminate this knowledge to future learners.
急诊临床医生处于识别和照料被贩运者的第一线。然而,大多数急诊医护人员从未接受过关于人口贩运的培训,研究报告称在这个重要主题上存在巨大的知识差距。研讨会通常采用“培训培训师”模式来弥补临床医生在包括人口贩运在内的各种主题上的知识差距。通过为参与者提供理解相关内容并将这些内容传授给未来学习者所需的知识和技能,该模式旨在促进基本信息的广泛传播。然而,当前的培训培训师研讨会通常需要一整天或多天的时间,并采用多模式教学技术,这对参与者和主持人来说都耗费时间和资源。为应对这些挑战,我们创建了一个50分钟的培训培训师研讨会,教授急诊临床医生识别和照料被贩运患者所需的知识和技能,同时提供在临床环境中向学习者传授这些内容的教学技术。学习理论和原则为教学方法的选择提供了依据,并在设计作为该干预主要教学资源的纸质学习指南时加以应用。指南包含用于进行角色扮演练习的详细脚本。这些“脚本指南”旨在让参与者学习重要内容,同时练习将这些内容传授给彼此的技巧。它们提供了在研讨会期间独立指导学习所需的框架(主持人干预最少),同时经过精心编排和组织,以便在临床教学中创建一个便于未来使用的工具。该课程在2018年印第安纳州印第安纳波利斯举行的学术急诊医学学会年会上实施。根据参与者使用回顾性前后测试进行的自我评估,该研讨会成功创建了一个简短的培训培训师模式,所需主持人资源最少,并提供内容知识和教学方法方面的指导,以便将这些知识传播给未来的学习者。