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Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training

Developing professional identity is a vital part of health professionals’ education. In Auckland four tertiary institutions have partnered to run an interprofessional simulation training course called Urgent and Immediate Patient Care Week (UIPCW) which is compulsory for Year Five medical, Year Four...

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Autores principales: Jowsey, Tanisha, Petersen, Lynne, Mysko, Chris, Cooper-Ioelu, Pauline, Herbst, Pauline, Webster, Craig S., Wearn, Andy, Marshall, Dianne, Torrie, Jane, Lin, Meng-Jiun Penny, Beaver, Peter, Egan, Johanne, Bacal, Kira, O’Callaghan, Anne, Weller, Jennifer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7392231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32730277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236085
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author Jowsey, Tanisha
Petersen, Lynne
Mysko, Chris
Cooper-Ioelu, Pauline
Herbst, Pauline
Webster, Craig S.
Wearn, Andy
Marshall, Dianne
Torrie, Jane
Lin, Meng-Jiun Penny
Beaver, Peter
Egan, Johanne
Bacal, Kira
O’Callaghan, Anne
Weller, Jennifer
author_facet Jowsey, Tanisha
Petersen, Lynne
Mysko, Chris
Cooper-Ioelu, Pauline
Herbst, Pauline
Webster, Craig S.
Wearn, Andy
Marshall, Dianne
Torrie, Jane
Lin, Meng-Jiun Penny
Beaver, Peter
Egan, Johanne
Bacal, Kira
O’Callaghan, Anne
Weller, Jennifer
author_sort Jowsey, Tanisha
collection PubMed
description Developing professional identity is a vital part of health professionals’ education. In Auckland four tertiary institutions have partnered to run an interprofessional simulation training course called Urgent and Immediate Patient Care Week (UIPCW) which is compulsory for Year Five medical, Year Four pharmacy, Year Three paramedicine and Year Three nursing students. We sought to understand student experiences of UIPCW and how those experiences informed student ideas about professional identity and their emergent practice as health professionals within multidisciplinary teams. In 2018, we commenced ethnographic research involving participant observation, field notes, interviews, photography and observational ethnographic film. A total of 115 students participated in this research. The emergent findings concern the potentially transformative learning opportunity presented within high fidelity multi-disciplinary simulations for students to develop their professional identity in relation to peers from other professions. Our work also exposes the heightened anxiety and stress which can be experienced by students in such interdisciplinary simulations. Student experience suggests this is due to a range of factors including students having to perform in front of peers and staff in such simulation scenarios when their own professional identity and capabilities are still in emergent stages. Staff-led simulation debriefs form a critical success factor for transformative learning to be able to occur in any such simulations so that students can reflect on, and move beyond, the emotion and uncertainty of such experiences to develop future-focused concepts of professional identity and strategies to support effective interprofessional teamwork.
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spelling pubmed-73922312020-08-05 Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training Jowsey, Tanisha Petersen, Lynne Mysko, Chris Cooper-Ioelu, Pauline Herbst, Pauline Webster, Craig S. Wearn, Andy Marshall, Dianne Torrie, Jane Lin, Meng-Jiun Penny Beaver, Peter Egan, Johanne Bacal, Kira O’Callaghan, Anne Weller, Jennifer PLoS One Research Article Developing professional identity is a vital part of health professionals’ education. In Auckland four tertiary institutions have partnered to run an interprofessional simulation training course called Urgent and Immediate Patient Care Week (UIPCW) which is compulsory for Year Five medical, Year Four pharmacy, Year Three paramedicine and Year Three nursing students. We sought to understand student experiences of UIPCW and how those experiences informed student ideas about professional identity and their emergent practice as health professionals within multidisciplinary teams. In 2018, we commenced ethnographic research involving participant observation, field notes, interviews, photography and observational ethnographic film. A total of 115 students participated in this research. The emergent findings concern the potentially transformative learning opportunity presented within high fidelity multi-disciplinary simulations for students to develop their professional identity in relation to peers from other professions. Our work also exposes the heightened anxiety and stress which can be experienced by students in such interdisciplinary simulations. Student experience suggests this is due to a range of factors including students having to perform in front of peers and staff in such simulation scenarios when their own professional identity and capabilities are still in emergent stages. Staff-led simulation debriefs form a critical success factor for transformative learning to be able to occur in any such simulations so that students can reflect on, and move beyond, the emotion and uncertainty of such experiences to develop future-focused concepts of professional identity and strategies to support effective interprofessional teamwork. Public Library of Science 2020-07-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7392231/ /pubmed/32730277 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236085 Text en © 2020 Jowsey et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jowsey, Tanisha
Petersen, Lynne
Mysko, Chris
Cooper-Ioelu, Pauline
Herbst, Pauline
Webster, Craig S.
Wearn, Andy
Marshall, Dianne
Torrie, Jane
Lin, Meng-Jiun Penny
Beaver, Peter
Egan, Johanne
Bacal, Kira
O’Callaghan, Anne
Weller, Jennifer
Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title_full Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title_fullStr Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title_full_unstemmed Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title_short Performativity, identity formation and professionalism: Ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
title_sort performativity, identity formation and professionalism: ethnographic research to explore student experiences of clinical simulation training
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7392231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32730277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236085
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