Francesca Quinn-Thomas f.quinn-thomas@keele.ac.uk
COMBINING SIMULATION AND OBSERVATION IN FIRST YEAR PHYSIOTHERAPY PLACEMENTS - SUCCESSES, CHALLENGES, AND NEXT STEPS
Quinn-Thomas, Fran
Authors
Abstract
Introduction: Securing first year placements has been an ongoing challenge. Current research [1] highlights that there are multiple barriers to offering placements such as time and student capability which may explain the challenges securing these placements. A new placement model was designed with the following aims: reduce the time per student in clinical practice, offset this with simulation, reduce the assessment burden for clinical educators, whilst providing a valuable learning experience which can be classified as placement hours.
Methods: The total duration of placement required was 3.8 weeks. Historically, this had all been in one clinical setting, with a Level 4 assessment form. For this iteration, all students attended an introductory week at university. The cohort was then divided into three rotating groups, with one third being on an observational experience, and two thirds at the university per week (see Table 1 for example student timetable).The observational experiences were in a variety of settings and were assessed with a feedback form which included total number of hours and feedback on professionalism. For the simulated weeks there was feedback on professionalism and a record of hours. In addition, the students had to complete the Care Certificate workbooks [2].Feedback from students about their placement experience was collated through evaluation forms (as per module requirements).Results: All students were able to attend a clinical observation period and participate in the simulated activities. The time in a clinical environment per student was reduced by 74%, yet the total number of placement hours for the student remained the same. In addition, the marking burden for the clinician educator was reduced from approximately two hours to five minutes (96% decrease). Students’ perceptions on the simulated activities were mixed – with an average score of 3.3 out of 5.
Discussion: There was a significant decrease in the demand for clinical educators through this placement model and it enabled all students to complete a placement in the allocated time. However, the review of the Care Certificate workbooks is lengthy (240 pages) and a major challenge of this placement. The evaluation response rate from students was very low (less than 10%) and therefore may not be representative. From the feedback, that higher fidelity and more immersive simulations were rated higher.
Further evaluation is recommended to identify simulations of higher value to students, staff and educators and long-term evaluation on preparedness of practice would be advantageous.
Ethics statement: Authors confirm that all relevant ethical standards for research conduct and dissemination have been met. The submitting author confirms that relevant ethical approval was granted, if applicable
Citation
Quinn-Thomas, F. (2024, November). COMBINING SIMULATION AND OBSERVATION IN FIRST YEAR PHYSIOTHERAPY PLACEMENTS - SUCCESSES, CHALLENGES, AND NEXT STEPS. Presented at Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare Conference 2024, Edinburgh
Presentation Conference Type | Conference Abstract |
---|---|
Conference Name | Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare Conference 2024 |
Start Date | Nov 3, 2024 |
End Date | Nov 5, 2024 |
Acceptance Date | Jul 15, 2024 |
Online Publication Date | Nov 4, 2024 |
Publication Date | Nov 4, 2024 |
Deposit Date | Apr 25, 2025 |
Journal | Journal of Healthcare Simulation |
Electronic ISSN | 2977-697X |
Publisher | Association for Simulated Practice in Healthcare |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 4 |
Issue | Supplement 1 |
Pages | A61-62 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.54531/KDCF5870 |
Public URL | https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1200037 |
Publisher URL | https://www.johs.org.uk/article/doi/10.54531/KDCF5870 |
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