Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2022;28(6):682-692. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001600. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
Between April 2020 and May 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) awarded more than $40 billion to health departments nationwide for COVID-19 prevention and response activities. One of the identified priorities for this investment was improving infection prevention and control (IPC) in nursing homes.
CDC developed a virtual course to train new and less experienced public health staff in core healthcare IPC principles and in the application of CDC COVID-19 healthcare IPC guidance for nursing homes.
From October 2020 to August 2021, the CDC led training sessions for 12 cohorts of public health staff using pretraining reading materials, case-based scenarios, didactic presentations, peer-learning opportunities, and subject matter expert-led discussions. Multiple electronic assessments were distributed to learners over time to measure changes in self-reported knowledge and confidence and to collect feedback on the course. Participating public health programs were also assessed to measure overall course impact.
Among 182 enrolled learners, 94% completed the training. Most learners were infection preventionists (42%) or epidemiologists (38%), had less than 1 year of experience in their health department role (75%), and had less than 1 year of subject matter experience (54%). After training, learners reported increased knowledge and confidence in applying the CDC COVID-19 healthcare IPC guidance for nursing homes (≥81%) with the greatest increase in performing COVID-19 IPC consultations and assessments (87%). The majority of participating programs agreed that the course provided an overall benefit (88%) and reduced training burden (72%).
The CDC's virtual course was effective in increasing public health capacity for COVID-19 healthcare IPC in nursing homes and provides a possible model to increase IPC capacity for other infectious diseases and other healthcare settings. Future virtual healthcare IPC courses could be enhanced by tailoring materials to health department needs, reinforcing training through applied learning experiences, and supporting mechanisms to retain trained staff.
2020 年 4 月至 2021 年 5 月,美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)向全国卫生部门拨款超过 400 亿美元,用于 COVID-19 预防和应对活动。这项投资的一个既定重点是改善养老院的感染预防和控制(IPC)。
CDC 开发了一门虚拟课程,旨在培训新的和经验较少的公共卫生工作人员,使其掌握核心医疗保健 IPC 原则,并应用 CDC 针对养老院的 COVID-19 医疗保健 IPC 指南。
从 2020 年 10 月至 2021 年 8 月,CDC 为 12 个公共卫生工作人员小组举办了培训课程,使用预培训阅读材料、基于案例的场景、教学演示、同伴学习机会和主题专家主导的讨论。随着时间的推移,向学习者分发了多个电子评估,以衡量自我报告的知识和信心的变化,并收集课程反馈。还对参与的公共卫生计划进行了评估,以衡量整体课程效果。
在 182 名注册学习者中,有 94%完成了培训。大多数学习者是感染预防员(42%)或流行病学家(38%),在卫生部门的角色中经验不足 1 年(75%),并且在主题方面的经验不足 1 年(54%)。培训后,学习者报告称,在应用 CDC 针对养老院的 COVID-19 医疗保健 IPC 指南方面,知识和信心有所提高(≥81%),在进行 COVID-19 IPC 咨询和评估方面的提高最大(87%)。大多数参与计划的机构认为该课程总体上具有益处(88%),并减轻了培训负担(72%)。
CDC 的虚拟课程有效地提高了公共卫生部门在养老院进行 COVID-19 医疗保健 IPC 的能力,并为在其他传染病和其他医疗保健环境中提高 IPC 能力提供了一种可能的模式。未来的虚拟医疗保健 IPC 课程可以通过根据卫生部门的需求定制材料、通过应用学习经验加强培训以及支持保留培训人员的机制来进行改进。