Login / Signup

Interprofessional collaboration between health professional learners when breaking bad news: a scoping review of teaching approaches.

Kelly LackieStephen MillerMarion BrownAmy MireaultMelissa HelwigLorri BeattyLeanne PickettsPeter StilwellShauna Houk
Published in: JBI evidence synthesis (2024)
Simulation-enhanced interprofessional education was the most reported teaching approach to teach interprofessional cohorts of students how to break bad news collaboratively. Inconsistencies were noted in the language used to describe bad news, use of breaking bad news and interprofessional competency frameworks, and integration of interprofessional education and simulation best practices. Further research should focus on other interprofessional approaches to teaching how to break bad news; how best to incorporate interprofessional competencies into interprofessional breaking bad news education; whether interprofessional education is enhancing collaborative breaking bad news; and whether what is learned about breaking bad news is being retained over the long-term and incorporated into practice. Future simulation-specific research should explore whether and how the Healthcare Simulation Standards of Best Practice are being implemented and whether simulation is resulting in student satisfaction and enhanced learning.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • patient safety
  • quality improvement
  • nursing students
  • primary care
  • public health
  • medical students
  • virtual reality
  • mental health
  • climate change
  • medical education
  • current status