Najjuma Josephine N, Muhumuza Albert, Santorino Data, Sekyere Samuel Owusu, Ocheke Amaka N, Yiltok Simon J, Bajunirwe Francis
Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Mbarara, Uganda.
African Forum for Research and Education in Health, Kumasi, Ghana.
BMC Med Educ. 2024 Dec 25;24(1):1528. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-06521-9.
Although Interprofessional Education (IPE) is an important component of medical education, it has only recently come under consideration in Sub-Saharan Africa. IPE occurs when two or more professions learn from, about and with each other regarding effective collaboration and the improvement of health outcomes. Current academic programs focus more on traditional approaches to training physicians, pharmacists, respiratory therapists, physiotherapists and nurses like they were independent entities. Simulation-Based Learning (SBL) is a potential platform to introduce IPE to Mbarara University of Science and Technology in southwestern Uganda that has a well- established medical simulation center but IPE has not yet been implemented. Evidence is scarce regarding the barriers and facilitators to implementing simulation-enhanced IPE (Sim-IPE). Therefore, the purpose of this study was to obtain information on barriers and facilitators of IPE from various stakeholders.
We conducted a qualitative study among university administrators, faculty and undergraduate medical and nursing students. We purposively selected undergraduate students to include 3rd and 4th year nursing students and 3-5th year medical students as they had been exposed to SBL. Guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), we conducted semi-structured interviews with administrators and faculty members, and focus group discussions with students (n = 31). The focus group discussions were uniprofessional with individuals from the same class allowing participants to share their views freely. Interviews were transcribed verbatim. We used the deductive (CFIR-driven) method to develop relevant codes and themes.
The barriers and facilitators identified to implementing Sim-IPE program arose from the six CFIR domains namely, the intervention characteristics, inner setting, outer setting, individual characteristics and the process. The barriers included the intervention processes such as lack of interprofessional educational resources, scheduling and communication gap between departments, the nonexistence of protected interprofessional simulation time in the curriculum, attitudes and unfavorable perceptions toward interprofessional simulation, and lack of clear assessment mechanism. The facilitators include the significance of IPE and the support of simulation-enhanced IPE (Sim-IPE).
Implementation of Sim-IPE faces significant process and policy barriers that require addressing. There is an opportunity to capitalize on the significance that stakeholders place on IPE. The findings can be used as a benchmark for designing Sim-IPE in other low- and- middle-income countries.
尽管跨专业教育(IPE)是医学教育的重要组成部分,但直到最近它才在撒哈拉以南非洲地区受到关注。当两个或更多专业就有效协作和改善健康结果相互学习、了解并共同学习时,就会发生跨专业教育。当前的学术项目更多地侧重于以传统方式培训医生、药剂师、呼吸治疗师、物理治疗师和护士,就好像他们是独立的个体一样。基于模拟的学习(SBL)是一个潜在的平台,可以将跨专业教育引入乌干达西南部的马巴拉科技大学,该校拥有一个成熟的医学模拟中心,但尚未实施跨专业教育。关于实施模拟强化跨专业教育(Sim - IPE)的障碍和促进因素的证据很少。因此,本研究的目的是从不同利益相关者那里获取有关跨专业教育的障碍和促进因素的信息。
我们对大学管理人员、教师以及本科医学和护理专业学生进行了一项定性研究。我们有目的地选择本科生,包括三年级和四年级护理专业学生以及三至五年级医学专业学生,因为他们已经接触过基于模拟的学习。在实施研究综合框架(CFIR)的指导下,我们对管理人员和教师进行了半结构化访谈,并与学生进行了焦点小组讨论(n = 31)。焦点小组讨论是同专业的,由来自同一个班级的学生参加,以便参与者自由分享他们的观点。访谈内容逐字记录。我们使用演绎法(由CFIR驱动)来制定相关代码和主题。
确定的实施Sim - IPE项目的障碍和促进因素来自CFIR的六个领域,即干预特征、内部环境、外部环境、个体特征和过程。障碍包括干预过程,如缺乏跨专业教育资源、部门之间的时间安排和沟通差距、课程中不存在受保护的跨专业模拟时间、对跨专业模拟的态度和负面看法,以及缺乏明确的评估机制。促进因素包括跨专业教育的重要性以及对模拟强化跨专业教育(Sim - IPE)的支持。
实施Sim - IPE面临重大的过程和政策障碍,需要加以解决。有机会利用利益相关者对跨专业教育的重视。这些研究结果可作为在其他低收入和中等收入国家设计Sim - IPE的基准。