Interprofessional Active Learning for Chronic Pain: Transforming Student Learning From Recall to Application.
Jeb T HelmsLaura FrankartMelissa BradnerJonathan EbersoleBeck ReganTaylor CrouchPublished in: Journal of medical education and curricular development (2023)
Chronic pain (CP) affects over 50 million Americans daily and represents a unique challenge for healthcare professionals due to its complexity. Across all health professions, only a small percentage of the curriculum is devoted to treating patients with CP. Unfortunately, much of the content is delivered passively via lecture without giving students an opportunity to practice the communication skills to effectively treat patients in the clinic. An interprofessional team of health educators identified 5 essential messages that students frequently struggle to convey to patients with CP. Those messages were based on interprofessional and profession-specific competencies to treat patients with CP from the International Association for the Study of Pain. The 5 messages highlighted the importance of (1) therapeutic alliance, (2) consistent interdisciplinary language, (3) patient prognosis, (4) evidence for pain medicine, surgery, and imaging, and (5) early referral to the interprofessional team. For each message, the team summarized relevant research supporting the importance of each individual message that could serve as a foundation for didactic content. The team then developed active learning educational activities that educators could use to have students practice the skills tied to each message. Each learning activity was designed to be delivered in an interprofessional manner.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- quality improvement
- patient safety
- healthcare
- primary care
- nursing students
- high school
- palliative care
- pain management
- public health
- medical students
- mental health
- minimally invasive
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- autism spectrum disorder
- physical activity
- case report
- coronary artery bypass
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord
- health promotion
- spinal cord injury
- coronary artery disease
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- photodynamic therapy
- patient reported