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Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care
Background: Reflective practice has become an integral element in healthcare and education.(1,2) Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) is the largest healthcare organization in Qatar and it aims to: develop highly competent healthcare practitioners, promote nurses’ critical thinking, enhance the implement...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
HBKU Press
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851960/ http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.64 |
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author | Almomani, Emad Alraoush, Tawfiq Saadah, Omar Nsour, Ahmed Al Kamble, Megha Samuel, Jisha Atallah, Karim Mustafa, Emad |
author_facet | Almomani, Emad Alraoush, Tawfiq Saadah, Omar Nsour, Ahmed Al Kamble, Megha Samuel, Jisha Atallah, Karim Mustafa, Emad |
author_sort | Almomani, Emad |
collection | PubMed |
description | Background: Reflective practice has become an integral element in healthcare and education.(1,2) Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) is the largest healthcare organization in Qatar and it aims to: develop highly competent healthcare practitioners, promote nurses’ critical thinking, enhance the implementation of evidence-based practice, encourage deep learning approaches, create positive learning environments, maintain patient safety, and bridge the gap between theory and practice in the critical care clinical settings.(3) To achieve this, in 2015, reflective learning conversations and debriefing educational methods have been introduced by the HMC Nursing Education and Research Department. Methods: The HMC critical care education team introduced a new one-hour Continuing Professional Development (CPD) educational activity under the title of “Reflective learning conversation and debriefing”. This educational activity has been officially added to the critical care monthly and annual education plans and calendars. The reflective and debriefing discussion aims to give the chance for the critical care practitioners to share their real clinical experiences.(1,2,4,5) The critical care nurses of HMC attend each session in a group of 5-7 clinicians and they are asked to reflect critically on a real clinical cases in relation to challenges, limitations, pitfalls, and improvement plan.(2,5) A facilitator with a clinical and educational background facilitates the discussion and nurses are encouraged to summarize the learning lessons from that experience in addition to the recommendations and action plans which will be decided accordingly. This is then disseminated and shared with other healthcare facilities if it fits their scope of service. The reflective learning conversation and debriefing guidelines and protocol were established by the corporate nursing education team and are available to clinicians and facilitators (Table 1). Results: Reflective learning conversation with a debriefing improves nurses and health care practitioner's critical thinking and competency level which was evident by learners’ feedback and clinical competency assessment (Table 2). Furthermore, that educational activity is an attractive teaching and learning method to create dynamic learning environments in the critical care clinical settings which was evident by learners and facilitators’ feedback (Table 2). Moreover, nurse empowerment and active engagement were enhanced and encouraged by applying that educational method which was evidenced by the clinical experts’ feedback (Table 2). Finally, applying that method was effective to enhance evidence-based practice and patient safety in critical care settings (Table 3). Conclusion: Reflective learning conversations and debriefing has been perceived to be an effective learning method. Healthcare practitioners can learn from errors and previous experiences to avoid future mistakes in clinical practice. Sharing clinical experiences provides a medium to discuss cases from different angles and in depth which helps to promote deep learning, evidence-based practice, active learning, and patient safety. The recommendations of reflective learning conversations and debriefings can be applied and utilized to change current practice toward best practice and are applicable in all clinical domains and specialties. Although currently attended only by nurses, such sessions would be even more beneficial if attended by multiple professions. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-6851960 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
publisher | HBKU Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-68519602019-11-22 Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care Almomani, Emad Alraoush, Tawfiq Saadah, Omar Nsour, Ahmed Al Kamble, Megha Samuel, Jisha Atallah, Karim Mustafa, Emad Qatar Med J Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract Background: Reflective practice has become an integral element in healthcare and education.(1,2) Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) is the largest healthcare organization in Qatar and it aims to: develop highly competent healthcare practitioners, promote nurses’ critical thinking, enhance the implementation of evidence-based practice, encourage deep learning approaches, create positive learning environments, maintain patient safety, and bridge the gap between theory and practice in the critical care clinical settings.(3) To achieve this, in 2015, reflective learning conversations and debriefing educational methods have been introduced by the HMC Nursing Education and Research Department. Methods: The HMC critical care education team introduced a new one-hour Continuing Professional Development (CPD) educational activity under the title of “Reflective learning conversation and debriefing”. This educational activity has been officially added to the critical care monthly and annual education plans and calendars. The reflective and debriefing discussion aims to give the chance for the critical care practitioners to share their real clinical experiences.(1,2,4,5) The critical care nurses of HMC attend each session in a group of 5-7 clinicians and they are asked to reflect critically on a real clinical cases in relation to challenges, limitations, pitfalls, and improvement plan.(2,5) A facilitator with a clinical and educational background facilitates the discussion and nurses are encouraged to summarize the learning lessons from that experience in addition to the recommendations and action plans which will be decided accordingly. This is then disseminated and shared with other healthcare facilities if it fits their scope of service. The reflective learning conversation and debriefing guidelines and protocol were established by the corporate nursing education team and are available to clinicians and facilitators (Table 1). Results: Reflective learning conversation with a debriefing improves nurses and health care practitioner's critical thinking and competency level which was evident by learners’ feedback and clinical competency assessment (Table 2). Furthermore, that educational activity is an attractive teaching and learning method to create dynamic learning environments in the critical care clinical settings which was evident by learners and facilitators’ feedback (Table 2). Moreover, nurse empowerment and active engagement were enhanced and encouraged by applying that educational method which was evidenced by the clinical experts’ feedback (Table 2). Finally, applying that method was effective to enhance evidence-based practice and patient safety in critical care settings (Table 3). Conclusion: Reflective learning conversations and debriefing has been perceived to be an effective learning method. Healthcare practitioners can learn from errors and previous experiences to avoid future mistakes in clinical practice. Sharing clinical experiences provides a medium to discuss cases from different angles and in depth which helps to promote deep learning, evidence-based practice, active learning, and patient safety. The recommendations of reflective learning conversations and debriefings can be applied and utilized to change current practice toward best practice and are applicable in all clinical domains and specialties. Although currently attended only by nurses, such sessions would be even more beneficial if attended by multiple professions. HBKU Press 2019-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6851960/ http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.64 Text en © 2019 Almomani, Alraoush, Saadah, Al Nsour, Kamble, Samuel, Atallah, Mustafa, licensee HBKU Press. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license CC BY 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract Almomani, Emad Alraoush, Tawfiq Saadah, Omar Nsour, Ahmed Al Kamble, Megha Samuel, Jisha Atallah, Karim Mustafa, Emad Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title | Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title_full | Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title_fullStr | Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title_full_unstemmed | Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title_short | Reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
title_sort | reflective learning conversations as an approach for clinical learning and teaching in critical care |
topic | Qatar Critical Care Conference Abstract |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6851960/ http://dx.doi.org/10.5339/qmj.2019.qccc.64 |
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