Ogbenna Ann, Caputo Matthew, Akodu Babatunde, Drane Denise, Ohanete Debora, Doobay-Persaud Ashti, Ogunseitan Adeboye, Johnson Lyra, Hou Lifang, Akanmu Alani, Hauser Joshua M
Department of Hematology and Blood Transfusion, Faculty of Clinical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Lagos, Nigeria
Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria.
BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2024 Dec 19;14(e3):e2937-e2943. doi: 10.1136/spcare-2024-004944.
This study reports on a yearlong sequence of three periodic, virtual trainings in primary palliative care for healthcare professionals across Nigeria. Our overall objective was to determine the impact of the full course on participants' attitudes, knowledge, skills and plans to implement and deliver palliative care in their local contexts.
The curriculum for this programme was codeveloped by a team of USA and Nigerian palliative care professionals and delivered via three 3-day virtual sessions. Daily surveys, knowledge tests and end-of-training surveys were administered to participants electronically. Demographics, knowledge scores, confidence levels and self-reported achievement were analysed using descriptive statistics.
Pretraining and post-training knowledge scores showed significant improvement with average gains of 10.3 percentage points in training 1 (p<0.001) to 11.7 percentage points in training 2 (p=0.01). More than three-quarters of participants improved their test scores. Most participants (89.4%-100%) agreed that they had achieved the daily learning objectives across all trainings. Nearly 100% of participants reported that they felt more empowered as healthcare workers, more confident in their decision-making and more comfortable communicating with patients and other healthcare workers about palliative care.
Healthcare workers in Nigeria demonstrated increased knowledge and confidence in providing palliative care as a result of an adapted virtual training programme. Further research is needed to (1) demonstrate feasibility for online trainings in similar resource-limited settings and (2) evaluate impact on patient-centred outcomes.
本研究报告了针对尼日利亚各地医疗保健专业人员开展的为期一年的原发性姑息治疗三期定期虚拟培训情况。我们的总体目标是确定整个课程对参与者的态度、知识、技能以及在当地实施和提供姑息治疗的计划的影响。
该项目的课程由美国和尼日利亚姑息治疗专业人员团队共同开发,并通过三个为期3天的虚拟课程进行授课。每天通过电子方式对参与者进行调查、知识测试和培训结束时的调查。使用描述性统计分析人口统计学、知识得分、信心水平和自我报告的成就。
培训前和培训后的知识得分显示出显著提高,培训1的平均提高幅度为10.3个百分点(p<0.001),培训2为11.7个百分点(p=0.01)。超过四分之三的参与者提高了他们的测试成绩。大多数参与者(89.4%-100%)表示他们在所有培训中都实现了每日学习目标。近100%的参与者报告说,作为医护人员,他们感到更有能力,在决策方面更有信心,并且在与患者和其他医护人员就姑息治疗进行沟通时更自在。
由于采用了适应性虚拟培训计划,尼日利亚的医护人员在提供姑息治疗方面的知识和信心有所增强。需要进一步研究以(1)证明在类似资源有限的环境中进行在线培训的可行性,以及(2)评估对以患者为中心的结果的影响。