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STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS

Meeting the needs of a growing population of older people living with complex conditions is highly dependent on healthcare providers partnering with family caregivers (FCGs). FCGs provide 90% of the care yet are marginalized within healthcare systems. Educating healthcare providers to support FCGs i...

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Autores principales: Parmar, Jasneet, Anderson, Sharon, Duggleby, Wendy, Lobchuk, Michelle, Drance, Elisabeth, L'Heureux, Tanya, Lowther, Johnna, Crowder, Kim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765732/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.210
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author Parmar, Jasneet
Anderson, Sharon
Duggleby, Wendy
Lobchuk, Michelle
Drance, Elisabeth
L'Heureux, Tanya
Lowther, Johnna
Crowder, Kim
author_facet Parmar, Jasneet
Anderson, Sharon
Duggleby, Wendy
Lobchuk, Michelle
Drance, Elisabeth
L'Heureux, Tanya
Lowther, Johnna
Crowder, Kim
author_sort Parmar, Jasneet
collection PubMed
description Meeting the needs of a growing population of older people living with complex conditions is highly dependent on healthcare providers partnering with family caregivers (FCGs). FCGs provide 90% of the care yet are marginalized within healthcare systems. Educating healthcare providers to support FCGs is a necessary step towards addressing the inconsistent system of supports for diverse FCGs throughout variable care trajectories. Current research suggests that co-design benefits stakeholders, produces superior outcomes, and facilitates moving knowledge efficiently into healthcare practices. Currently, moving best practices into healthcare is a time-consuming process (10-17 years). This presentation will discuss a feasible three-phase co-design process that included 120 multilevel interdisciplinary stakeholders including FCGs, educators, researchers, not-for-profit and healthcare providers/leaders, educational designers, and policy influencers/makers: 1) Developing relationships and insights; 2) Translating insights into education design; and 3) Planning the implementation, spread, and scale-up. The research tools used included literature reviews, qualitative and survey research on specific topics, consultations (symposia, modified Delphi process, co-design meetings), and mixed methods evaluation. Three modules, Foundational, COVID-19, and Advanced have been developed. Learners report high satisfaction, relevance, and significant knowledge gains upon completion. This successful education co-design required three critical elements: 1) an engaged co-design team led by people knowledgeable about healthcare and FCGs; 2) team access to collaborators/staff with the appropriate theoretical, research, and facilitation skills; and 3) an educational design team to bring stakeholders’ ideas to life. Leveraging stakeholders’ insights are a critical step towards the RAISE act goal of educating healthcare providers to include FCGs as partners-in-care.
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spelling pubmed-97657322022-12-20 STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS Parmar, Jasneet Anderson, Sharon Duggleby, Wendy Lobchuk, Michelle Drance, Elisabeth L'Heureux, Tanya Lowther, Johnna Crowder, Kim Innov Aging Abstracts Meeting the needs of a growing population of older people living with complex conditions is highly dependent on healthcare providers partnering with family caregivers (FCGs). FCGs provide 90% of the care yet are marginalized within healthcare systems. Educating healthcare providers to support FCGs is a necessary step towards addressing the inconsistent system of supports for diverse FCGs throughout variable care trajectories. Current research suggests that co-design benefits stakeholders, produces superior outcomes, and facilitates moving knowledge efficiently into healthcare practices. Currently, moving best practices into healthcare is a time-consuming process (10-17 years). This presentation will discuss a feasible three-phase co-design process that included 120 multilevel interdisciplinary stakeholders including FCGs, educators, researchers, not-for-profit and healthcare providers/leaders, educational designers, and policy influencers/makers: 1) Developing relationships and insights; 2) Translating insights into education design; and 3) Planning the implementation, spread, and scale-up. The research tools used included literature reviews, qualitative and survey research on specific topics, consultations (symposia, modified Delphi process, co-design meetings), and mixed methods evaluation. Three modules, Foundational, COVID-19, and Advanced have been developed. Learners report high satisfaction, relevance, and significant knowledge gains upon completion. This successful education co-design required three critical elements: 1) an engaged co-design team led by people knowledgeable about healthcare and FCGs; 2) team access to collaborators/staff with the appropriate theoretical, research, and facilitation skills; and 3) an educational design team to bring stakeholders’ ideas to life. Leveraging stakeholders’ insights are a critical step towards the RAISE act goal of educating healthcare providers to include FCGs as partners-in-care. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9765732/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.210 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Parmar, Jasneet
Anderson, Sharon
Duggleby, Wendy
Lobchuk, Michelle
Drance, Elisabeth
L'Heureux, Tanya
Lowther, Johnna
Crowder, Kim
STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title_full STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title_fullStr STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title_full_unstemmed STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title_short STEPS TOWARD RAISE: CO-DESIGN OF COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION TO ENGAGE FAMILY CAREGIVERS AS PARTNERS
title_sort steps toward raise: co-design of competency-based education to engage family caregivers as partners
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9765732/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.210
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