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Teaching about Dementia In a Clinical Setting

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One of the most important teaching skills. Essential first step in deciding what to teach ... Saves time. Patients like it. Involves the patient ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching about Dementia In a Clinical Setting


1
Teaching about DementiaIn a Clinical Setting
  • Using the Microskills of TeachingPrepared by
    Wayne Weston

2
Question
  • What are some opportunities to help our students
    and residents learn about the practical uses of
    cholinesterase inhibitors?

3
Objectives
  • At the end of this session, participants will be
    able to
  • Describe the eight microskills for clinical
    teaching
  • Use the various components of the framework in
    your own clinical teaching (e.g. needs
    assessment, priming feedback)
  • Apply these skills in teaching about the use of
    cholinesterase inhibitors in dementia
  • Discuss how to start, switch, or stop
    cholinesterase inhibitors.

4
The teaching/learning process tends to be more
effective if
  • Individuals are intellectually active in the
    learning process
  • Individuals have opportunities for practice with
    feedback, the goal of the latter to help them
    identify the success of their learning
  • Individuals have opportunities for reflection
  • Individuals are clear about what to learn

5
The Value of Active Involvement
6
The One Minute Preceptor
  • Eight microskills
  • Needs assessment
  • Priming
  • Get a Commitment
  • Probe for Supporting Evidence
  • Reinforce What Was Done Well
  • Correct Mistakes
  • Teach General Rules
  • Reflection Integration

These 5 skills are the one minute part
7
Microskill 1 Needs Assessment
  • One of the most important teaching skills.
  • Essential first step in deciding what to teach
  • Want to focus on areas that the student needs to
    work on rather than on things they have already
    mastered
  • Use orientation to find out
  • What they have done before
  • What they would like to get out of the
    rotation/case

8
Needs Assessment, contd.
  • Global needs assessment best guess based on
  • Curriculum outline and objectives
  • Previous experience with students at the same
    level
  • Specific ongoing needs assessment based on
  • Orientation
  • Priming
  • Questions
  • Observing with patients
  • Case presentation
  • Chart review

9
More on Orientation
  • Think about the things that will facilitate their
    learning on the rotation (i.e. When you were
    starting a new rotation, what did you wish
    someone would tell you to help you get off to a
    good start?)
  • Climate setting
  • Approach to supervision and teaching
  • Student assessment
  • Additional items

10
Microskill 2 Priming
  • Preparing learners before they see patients

11
Priming
  • Create some relevance or experiential link
  • Ever work in this environment before (i.e. E.R.,
    wards etc.)?
  • Ever see or manage a case like this before?

12
Priming, contd.
  • Clarify the task
  • Separate and acknowledge the difference between
  • The learning objectives for seeing this case
  • The service/support requirements of the case
  • Define what questions will need to be answered
    following the case
  • What is the diagnosis or Differential diagnosis?
  • How will we differentiate these?
  • How will we manage the symptoms?
  • What are the patients outcome goals?
  • What is the prognosis?

13
Priming, contd.
  • Learning focused on diagnostic skills,"Meet me
    back here in 15 minutes and present a problem
    list and differential"
  • Learning focused on management issues,"The
    diagnosis is pretty clear. Review all the results
    with the patient, discuss the treatment options
    and let me know in about 30 minutes what you
    think will work the best for her".
  • The learner must feel safe enough to risk a
    commitment even if it is wrong.

14
Priming, contd.
  • Promote reflection
  • Ask students to report not only on their clinical
    findings but also their own thoughts feelings
  • Self-observe what they do to prepare for each
    patient visit
  • Ask, How might your prior experience with
    patients affect your decision-making in this
    case?
  • Give them time for reflection /or to look things
    up
  • From Ron Epstein Mindful Practice in Action II,
  • Family Systems Health, Spring 2003.

15
Priming, contd.
  • Decide on the roles of teacher student when
    going back in the room
  • Student conduct the interaction
  • Consider a short role play
  • Decide on a bail out plan if necessary
  • Teacher take over outline your plan so that the
    student knows what to look for (but acknowledge
    it may change depending on what happens in the
    interaction)
  • Some combination of above be clear about who
    does what

16
Include the Patient in priming
  • Saves time
  • Patients like it
  • Involves the patient
  • Priming is even more important to help student
    perform well avoid embarrassment
  • Opportunity to model effective interaction
  • Make sure patient did not misunderstand comments

17
Microskill 3 Get a Commitment
  • The learner must feel safe enough to risk a
    commitment even if it is wrong.

18
Microskill 4 Probe for Supporting Evidence
  • What......( factors make this diagnosis likely)?
  • Why...... (do you suggest getting this test
    first?)
  • Which......(medications are available for this
    condition?)
  • How...... (did this prognosis emerge as the most
    probable?)

19
Microskill 5 Reinforce What was Done Well
  • Some examples
  • "You did a good job of considering multiple
    possibilities and prioritizing the most probable
    diagnoses"
  • "I noticed how well you considered the patients
    age and concerns about cost in selecting
    medications"

20
Microskill 6 Correct Mistakes
  • "I agree this patients headache is worrying him,
    but from the history and in the absence of
    neurological signs, CT is more likely to distract
    us with false positive findings than change the
    diagnosis or management plan. Let me give you
    some good references on that and help you discuss
    this with the patient."
  • "That drug is often a good first choice for this
    condition, but she is also taking warfarin (or
    has an elevated creatinine) and the interaction
    would be dangerous."

21
If the Student had Difficulties
  • Answer a few questions
  • Short role play of part of the interview that the
    student had trouble with to consolidate
    learning
  • Suggest references for review after the office

22
Feedback Grid
Developed by the Bayer Institute for Health Care
Communication
23
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24
Time
  • Frequent short feedback vs. marathon sessions
  • E.g. beginnings, middle issues, endings
  • Teach reflection self-assessment
  • Involve others e.g. nurse, peers, patients

25
The Feedback Process
  • Private setting.
  • Postpone feedback when you are angry.
  • Invite self-assessment first.
  • Link feedback with learners objectives.
  • Use the feedback grid continue do
    different.
  • Compare self-evaluation with your observations.

26
The Feedback Process, contd.
  • Elicit or suggest alternative behaviours.
  • Address realistic changes in doable steps.
  • Provide an opportunity to try again (with real
    patient, simulated patient or role play).
  • Establish clear follow-up plans.

27
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28
Microskill 7 Teach General Rules
  • "In older patients with headache, it is important
    to consider glaucoma and temporal arteritis as
    well as the primary headaches"
  • When both parents come with a sick child, it
    usually indicates they are very worried and we
    need to pay extra attention to their concerns."

29
Microskill 8 Encourage Reflection and
Integration
  • "How did things go today from your perspective?
  • Who was you most interesting patient this
    afternoon?
  • "How is the practice different from your
    expectations?
  • "Did anything surprise you today?
  • Encourage them to keep a personal journal of
    their reflections

30
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31
Videotape example
32
Exercize
  • Work in small groups of 6-8
  • Roles of group members
  • Facilitator
  • Recorder/reporter
  • Expert
  • Resident this role can rotate
  • Teacher this role can rotate

33
Roles for resident
  • Use one mentioned in the initial discussion of
    opportunities
  • Margaret Jones with dementia consideration of
    switching meds prime the resident
  • End of a busy day. Discuss Martin Schwartz
    family wonders about Exelon
  • Chart review ?inappropriate switch to Exelon

34
Your task
  • Decide who does what
  • Select one of the role plays
  • Strategize briefly
  • Role play
  • Get feedback
  • Re-do part of the role play if desired or get
    someone else to try it
  • If time, do another role play
  • Report on what you learned

35
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