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Effective interprofessional simulation training for medical and midwifery students

Edwards, S. E.; Platt, S.; Lenguerrand, E.; Winter, C.; Mears, J.; Davis, S.; Lucas, G.; Holton, E.; Fox, R.; Draycott, T.; Siassakos, D.

Authors

S. E. Edwards

S. Platt

E. Lenguerrand

C. Winter

J. Mears

E. Holton

R. Fox

T. Draycott

D. Siassakos



Contributors

Cathy Winter
Other

S Davis
Other

S
Other

R Fox
Other

Abstract

© Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. Introduction Good interprofessional teamworking is essential for high quality, efficient and safe clinical care. Undergraduate interprofessional training has been advocated for many years to improve interprofessional working. However, few successful initiatives have been reported and even fewer have formally assessed their educational impact. Methods This was a prospective observational study of medical and midwifery students at a tertiary-level maternity unit. An interprofessional training module was developed and delivered by a multiprofessional faculty to medical and midwifery students, including short lectures, team-building exercises and practical simulation-based training for one obstetric (shoulder dystocia) and three generic emergencies (sepsis, haemorrhage, collapse). Outcome measures were interprofessional attitudes, assessed with a validated questionnaire (UWE Interprofessional Questionnaire) and clinical knowledge, measured with validated multiple-choice questions. Results Seventy-two students participated (34 medical, 38 midwifery). Following training median interprofessional attitude scores improved in all domains (p

Citation

Edwards, S. E., Platt, S., Lenguerrand, E., Winter, C., Mears, J., Davis, S., …Siassakos, D. (2015). Effective interprofessional simulation training for medical and midwifery students. BMJ Simulation & Technology Enhanced Learning, 1(3), 87-93. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjstel-2015-000022

Journal Article Type Other
Acceptance Date Sep 14, 2015
Online Publication Date Oct 5, 2015
Publication Date Dec 23, 2015
Deposit Date Jan 15, 2020
Journal BMJ Simulation and Technology Enhanced Learning
Print ISSN 2056-6697
Electronic ISSN 2056-6697
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 1
Issue 3
Pages 87-93
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjstel-2015-000022
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/5144785
Publisher URL https://stel.bmj.com/content/1/3/87