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Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project

AIMS: The authors designed a unique simulation training programme exclusively for the liaison practitioners based in Aintree University Hospital Mental Health Liaison Team (MHLT). The simulation training aimed to improve the knowledge, confidence and competence of liaison practitioners through expos...

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Autores principales: Javed, Qaiser, Easwaran, Sruthi, Shamim, Aamer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345750/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.290
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author Javed, Qaiser
Easwaran, Sruthi
Shamim, Aamer
author_facet Javed, Qaiser
Easwaran, Sruthi
Shamim, Aamer
author_sort Javed, Qaiser
collection PubMed
description AIMS: The authors designed a unique simulation training programme exclusively for the liaison practitioners based in Aintree University Hospital Mental Health Liaison Team (MHLT). The simulation training aimed to improve the knowledge, confidence and competence of liaison practitioners through exposing them to realistic mental health related scenarios in an Accident and Emergency department (AED) and teaching them clinical skills in a safe environment. METHODS: The programme had been delivered by a Liaison Psychiatrist, core and higher trainees in once-monthly session lasting 45 minutes. Six clinical scenarios were picked based on the most common AED presentations. Scripts for all six scenarios were prepared in advance and both content and quality were checked with a liaison consultant psychiatrist. The scenarios depicted the journey of a patient being referred by the AED doctor to MHLT. Various clinical skills were embedded in the training programme including history taking, risk assessment, eliciting psychopathology, brief physical examination, managing co-morbid physical and mental health conditions, use of Mental capacity and Mental Health Act, and collaborative working with AED colleagues. Each station lasted 10-15 minutes and was accompanied by pre-briefing and debriefing with a higher trainee and experienced liaison psychiatrist for a further 30 minutes. Liaison practitioners rated their confidence managing common but complex scenarios on Likert scales from 1 to 5 immediately before and after the session. Free-text questions explored practitioner's favourite aspects of the training, areas of further improvement and topics they would like the authors to include in the future training. Feedback had guided subsequent programme development and topic selection. RESULTS: The strength of the target audience was between 6 and 15 nurses per session, with increasing attendance at each session. Dropouts were mainly related to their busy shifts in AED. On average, Likert scale scores were between 1-2 before and 5 after sessions (100% in all feedback forms), indicating a statistically significant improvement in overall confidence and competence. Participants highlighted the format, real-life performance, quality of clinical scenarios and power point slides including group discussions as the most useful aspects of the training. 100% of respondents felt that the content covered was useful and the session content was pitched at the appropriate level. CONCLUSION: Overall, 'Train 2 Retain' Simulation training was well-received amongst liaison practitioners. Embedding simulation training can improve the confidence and skills of liaison practitioners working in a busy AED setting which will improve well-being and staff retention. The next phase in the development of the training will be to include competence-based assessment and involving practitioners from other liaison services within the trust.
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spelling pubmed-103457502023-07-15 Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project Javed, Qaiser Easwaran, Sruthi Shamim, Aamer BJPsych Open Quality Improvement AIMS: The authors designed a unique simulation training programme exclusively for the liaison practitioners based in Aintree University Hospital Mental Health Liaison Team (MHLT). The simulation training aimed to improve the knowledge, confidence and competence of liaison practitioners through exposing them to realistic mental health related scenarios in an Accident and Emergency department (AED) and teaching them clinical skills in a safe environment. METHODS: The programme had been delivered by a Liaison Psychiatrist, core and higher trainees in once-monthly session lasting 45 minutes. Six clinical scenarios were picked based on the most common AED presentations. Scripts for all six scenarios were prepared in advance and both content and quality were checked with a liaison consultant psychiatrist. The scenarios depicted the journey of a patient being referred by the AED doctor to MHLT. Various clinical skills were embedded in the training programme including history taking, risk assessment, eliciting psychopathology, brief physical examination, managing co-morbid physical and mental health conditions, use of Mental capacity and Mental Health Act, and collaborative working with AED colleagues. Each station lasted 10-15 minutes and was accompanied by pre-briefing and debriefing with a higher trainee and experienced liaison psychiatrist for a further 30 minutes. Liaison practitioners rated their confidence managing common but complex scenarios on Likert scales from 1 to 5 immediately before and after the session. Free-text questions explored practitioner's favourite aspects of the training, areas of further improvement and topics they would like the authors to include in the future training. Feedback had guided subsequent programme development and topic selection. RESULTS: The strength of the target audience was between 6 and 15 nurses per session, with increasing attendance at each session. Dropouts were mainly related to their busy shifts in AED. On average, Likert scale scores were between 1-2 before and 5 after sessions (100% in all feedback forms), indicating a statistically significant improvement in overall confidence and competence. Participants highlighted the format, real-life performance, quality of clinical scenarios and power point slides including group discussions as the most useful aspects of the training. 100% of respondents felt that the content covered was useful and the session content was pitched at the appropriate level. CONCLUSION: Overall, 'Train 2 Retain' Simulation training was well-received amongst liaison practitioners. Embedding simulation training can improve the confidence and skills of liaison practitioners working in a busy AED setting which will improve well-being and staff retention. The next phase in the development of the training will be to include competence-based assessment and involving practitioners from other liaison services within the trust. Cambridge University Press 2023-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10345750/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.290 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This does not need to be placed under each abstract, just each page is fine.
spellingShingle Quality Improvement
Javed, Qaiser
Easwaran, Sruthi
Shamim, Aamer
Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title_full Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title_fullStr Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title_full_unstemmed Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title_short Implementing ‘Train 2 Retain’ Simulation Training Programme for the Mental Health Liaison Practitioners: A 6 Month Pilot Project
title_sort implementing ‘train 2 retain’ simulation training programme for the mental health liaison practitioners: a 6 month pilot project
topic Quality Improvement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345750/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.290
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