Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student...

13
Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice, Policy and Impact Liz Anderson Discipline Lead, Medicine & Dentistry

Transcript of Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student...

Page 1: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11th July 2013

Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice, Policy and ImpactLiz Anderson Discipline Lead, Medicine & Dentistry

Page 2: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

This workshop used an adaptation of the world café idea

Ref: Anderson, L. (2011) How to use the world café concept to create an interactive learning environment, Education for Primary Care (2011) 22: 337–8

2

World café

Page 3: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• Our overall aim is to enhance the student learning experience through the sharing of good practice, raising awareness and recognising innovation

• We are aware of the challenges that individuals and organisations face in the governance, design, delivery and organisation of education

• There are a wide range of schemes, funding and initiatives that we aim to engage staff, students and service users in to support development of PPI

3

HEA & PPI

Page 4: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• Educating for PPI (E4PPI) in collaboration with Southbank University

• Funding opportunities http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/funding

• Resources http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/resources

• Talking heads

• Linking with concurrent cluster projects

• Dedicated section of the HSCE bulletin

4

HEA & PPI

Page 6: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• A ‘patient-led NHS’

• A focus on outcomes that must involve patient experience

• Putting patients and public first

• Identifying how user experiences can improve services

• Involving people in their own care to reduce inequalities, improve concordance and the overall patient experience

• Patient experience related to and influences patient safety

Context of health & social care delivery

Page 7: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• People who are patients, carers, service users or members of the public may be involved in a wide range of initiatives in higher education. This is now evident across many discipline areas and organisations other than health http://www.publicengagement.ac.uk/

• Involvement is particularly well established in certain areas of health and social care professional education eg GMC case studies

• However, although involvement is extensive and diverse, it may range from an embedded institutional approach to ‘pockets’ of innovation, with specific groups of learners 7

Educational context

Page 8: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• The Francis Report, patient safety, human factor agenda.

• Regulatory bodies eg: GMC

• Commissioners – Health Education England

• Attention to student experience

• Pedagogical trends in medical education

• National Student Survey

• PPI in research INVOLVE

8

Key drivers

Page 9: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

Level 1 : little involvement or consultation

Level 2 : emerging involvement

Level 3: growing involvement

Level 4: collaboration

Level 5: partnership

Tew, J, Gell, C., Foster, S. (2004). Learning from Experience Involving Service Users and Carers in Mental Health Education and Training. Nottingham: Higher Education Academy/ National Institute for Mental Health in England/Trent Workforce Confederation.

9

Ladder of involvement Tew et al (2004)

Page 10: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

6 main educational roles

• Paper based/electronic scenario

• Simulated patient

• Patient sharing experiences with staff facilitating

• Patient teacher- teaching or evaluating

• Patient teacher as partner in design, delivery and evaluation of the curriculum

• Involved at institutional level Towle, A. et al (2010) Active patient involvement in the education of health professionals: Medical Education; Volume 44, Issue 1, pages 64–74,

10

The spectrum of involvement Towle et al (2010)

Page 11: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• Strong evidence that user involvement has short term benefits for all involved in terms of knowledge , skills and behaviour

• Less long term evaluation of the impact on professional and practice outcomes

11

Evidence to support PPI

Page 12: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

In small groups:

Individually write one sentence per post it on where & how you might use patients/service users/carers in your work. Try to write 3-4 post its.

Place your post its onto the flip chart reading them out to the group

Using the flip chart notes and thinking about different levels of involvement discuss & prepare to feedback

• Where you would like to be next year

• What might be the barriers and facilitators to success

• How might you assess impact

12

Task (30 minutes)

Page 13: Dawne Gurbutt, Discipline Lead, Health Related Studies 11 th July 2013 Enhancing the student learning experience through Patient & Public Involvement Practice,

• On-going research is required to further develop the evidence base

• Innovation requires an appropriate infrastructure, with policy and processes that facilitate involvement

• There is a need for a sharing of good practice, facilitation of development of involvement and a central repository of resources to promote knowledge transfer

• How involved is involved? Challenges and barriers in academic culture need to be identified.

• Spencer J.(2011) Can patients be teachers? Involving patients and service users in healthcare professionals’ education. A report to the Health Foundation . London : The Health Foundation

13

Conclusion