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  • 8 Apr 2020 9:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)

    Did you know that the ANZAHPE can support you to connect with colleagues? The ANZAHPE online Member Directory lists all our members and is searchable. For this feature to function effectively, we need all members to update their profile. 

    Updating your profile: 

    • Go to the ANZAHPE homepage and click on the 'person icon' for member login (on the right top corner)

    • This will take you to a Log In page which asks for your email and password. If you don’t remember your password or have never logged into the ANZAHPE website before, just click on the Forgot password button (and use your institutional email or other email you have signed up to ANZAHPE with to retrieve a temporary password)
    • Once you have sorted out your password and have logged in, you will need to click on the ‘person icon’ again and View Profile.
    • Then you can use the Edit Profile function (at the top of the page) to edit/update your details. The key fields are: Institution, Position, Profession, Biography, and Scholarly interests. You can also add a photo if you wish. Please note that only members who are logged into the ANZAHPE website can view these extended details (these are not publicly available).
    • Make sure you Save your changes. 

    Searching the Member Directory:

    • You don’t need to be logged in to view and search the member directory and view basic details e.g. member name, institution, and scholarly interests.
    • You need to be logged into the ANZAHPE website to view details such as Position, Profession, and Biography.
    • Use the Advanced Search function to search for members within a specific profession, sector, state, or country.

    Koshila Kumar
    Membership Secretary, ANZAHPE

  • 8 Apr 2020 9:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)

    Progress reports on projects that received ANZAHPE Research Grants in 2019.

    Developing resilience and positive mental health strategies in health professional students
    Project Lead: Ben Milbourn

    “Talk to Me” – Improving mental health and suicide prevention for young adults

    A scoping review of the literature on suicide prevention programs has been carried out and submitted for peer review. The “Talk to Me” mass open online course (MOOC) has been developed as an online suicide prevention intervention created to address the growing mental health needs of university students. The program contains 6 modules covering positive mental health strategies, suicide and self-harm awareness, crisis communication skills, and current interventions. Key skills include suicide crisis planning and response strategies, as well as ways to improve your own or others’ mental health. Funds from the grant were used to develop video resources using actors to create a narrative of a person experiencing mental health distress. Lived experience educators consulted on the scripts of the scenarios. A pilot of two of the modules was carried out late November 2019. A consumer reference group and non-government organisations working in community mental health have consulted on the MOOC content, providing valuable feedback.  The project will now move to the next phase and commence roll out the MOOC using randomised control group methodology for approximately 250 health university students in March 2020. 


    Enhancing feedback literacy in the workplace: a learner-centred approach
    Project lead: Christy Noble

    Junior doctors in emergency departments (ED) have reported dissatisfaction with feedback in this setting (Chaou et al., 2017; Yarris et al., 2009). Medical educators and supervisors often conceptualise feedback as information transmission (i.e. from the supervisor to the learner). With this prevailing view of feedback, it is not surprising that junior doctors’ active role in feedback can be overlooked when developing professional capabilities. Moreover, working in busy fast-paced environments, such as emergency departments, can make it challenging for supervisors to balance patient care with feedback (Chaou et al., 2017). Heightening junior doctors’ skills in feedback, as seekers, processors, and users of performance information may support their learning experiences, transitions between terms, and ongoing capacity to learn through work.

    This ongoing design-based research study aims to explore how junior doctors engage with feedback processes, after participating in a feedback literacy program during their emergency medicine term at Gold Coast Health. We have conducted five feedback literacy sessions with 80 interns.  Each iteration has been evaluated through focus groups interviews (n=5) with the interns (n=30) and through educator reflections.  Based on these data, the sessions were refined to enhance intern feedback literacy.  

    Our thematic analysis is ongoing, however based on our initial analysis, interns suggested that the literacy sessions contributed to their understanding of effective feedback practices in ED. They described using a range of new strategies such as priming the supervisors for feedback, and sharing their evaluative judgments to facilitate their engagement in feedback conversations. They noted that these strategies may be transferable to other terms and felt more confident to seek feedback. We have found it is important for interns to have structured tools, such as  written feedback, to prompt feedback conversations, yet it is the conservation that has most impact on their learning. The interns also described ongoing challenges when engaging in feedback in ED including lacking time to follow up, and  feeling exhausted and non-receptive to feedback. Overall, our analysis suggests that a key feature of being feedback literate is being able to read cues about performance from the environment and interpret these in a meaningful way.  For further research, there would be value in conducting observational studies to understand the interplay between context and feedback literacy.

    References

    Chaou, C.-H., Monrouxe, L. V., Chang, L.-C., Yu, S.-R., Ng, C.-J., Lee, C.-H., & Chang, Y.-C. (2017). Challenges of feedback provision in the workplace: A qualitative study of emergency medicine residents and teachers. Medical Teacher, 39(11), 1145-1153. doi:10.1080/0142159X.2017.1366016

    Yarris, L. M., Linden, J. A., Gene Hern, H., Lefebvre, C., Nestler, D. M., Fu, R., . . . Brunett, P. (2009). Attending and Resident Satisfaction with Feedback in the Emergency Department.16(s2), S76-S81. doi:doi:10.1111/j.1553-2712.2009.00592.x

    An innovative gender-focused education intervention for health professional students: A pilot study 
    Project  Lead: Frances Doran

    Sexual harassment, bullying, and discrimination based on gender occurs across a range of health care settings with frequent complaints made to Health Professional Registration Boards of Australia and the Australian Health Practitioner Agency.   Undergraduate health professional education provides an ideal opportunity to not only initiate a change in attitudes about gendered violence but also equip graduates on how to deal with it, prevent it, and become safe and ethical clinical practitioners. This is an area that is often overlooked in undergraduate curriculum.

    To meet this gap in education, ANZAHPE funded an innovative gender-focused education intervention which incorporated a bystander component, delivered to students enrolled in the Master of Osteopathic Medicine students at Southern Cross University. The goal was to enhance knowledge and awareness of the gendered drivers of violence and facilitate attitudinal and behavioral change.

    Progress to date

    • Ethics approval gained 
    • Gender-focused primary prevention educational intervention, developed in consultation with an expert in gender-based violence
    • Workshops delivered to two groups of students enrolled in the Master of Osteopathic Medicine at Southern Cross University
    • Students completed pre- and post-education surveys
    • Statistical data analysis complete (preliminary analysis indicates statistically significant changes in some attitudes and knowledge)
    • Follow-up interviews/surveys to be completed 
    • Final report and publication to the ANZAHPE journal in preparation

    The results are applicable to a broad range of people interested in gender-inclusive health professional education

    Analysis of Leadership activities and strategies in Interprofessional Learning using a cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) approach 
    Project Lead: Helena Ward

    This research study focuses on leadership activities and strategies in interprofessional learning (IPL) using Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) to analyse the links between the actions that leaders take to promote learning, their everyday activities and their longer-term strategies.   

    The outcomes of this study will add to the body of knowledge on IPL and inform design, implementation, and evaluation of IPL programs.

    The research questions are:

    • How are leaders building capacity in IPL?
    • How can these findings be applied to other IPL contexts?

    Using a Leading for Learning Reflection tool, participants were asked to record examples of their actions that were aimed at fostering interprofessional learning in everyday activities and how these actions related to their overall goals for IPL.  Participants were interviewed to explore how they are build capacity in interprofessional learning and their views on leadership and learning.

    In 2019, we conducted a pilot study with the reflection tool and follow up interviews. This led to some changes in the reflection tool and data collection process.  Through a separate IPL balanced scorecard project last year, we have identified academic staff within the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences who have a leadership role in IPL.  We are currently focusing on participant recruitment during the first half of 2020, to be followed by interviews.

    Development of an Evidence-Based Practice Learning and Assessment Framework for academics, workplace learning supervisors, and students: An action research project  
    Project Lead:  Kylie Murphy

    Since receiving an Australian and New Zealand Association for Health Professional Educators (ANZAHPE) research grant in July 2019, the research team has developed resources informed by feedback from academics, placement-experienced students, and placement supervisors from a range of health disciplines.

    The initial draft framework was informed by a review of relevant literature and the combined expertise of the research team in relation to Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) education. Preliminary feedback from placement supervisors suggests that a summarising poster, a more detailed booklet, and checklists, available to download from a website, would best meet supervisor needs. Since then, feedback from the stakeholder groups—received through focus groups, interviews, and email exchanges—has informed the refinement of these resources. 

    The formative evaluation, involving iterative cycles of feedback, reflection, and further refinement, is now complete. The team is currently finalising the resources for publication and summative evaluation. The resources will be made freely available on a website that will include a link to a brief evaluation survey.  This website will be launched in April 2020. 

    If you know clinical placement coordinators and/or supervisors who may be interested in receiving the resources and contributing to the survey, please encourage them to email kmurphy@csu.edu.au


  • 8 Apr 2020 8:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)


    LIME Connection VIII

    The eighth biennial Leaders in Indigenous Medical Education Network (LIME) Connection was hosted by the University of Otago and held in Ōtautahi (Christchurch), Aotearoa (New Zealand) from 5–8 November 2019. The theme was ‘Pouhine Poutama: Embedding Indigenous Health Education’.

    The conference built on evidence and strengths-based presentations from previous LIME Connection conferences, and highlighted initiatives relating to indigenous health teaching and learning, curriculum development and research, community engagement, and the recruitment and graduation of Indigenous students and trainees in the health professions.

    Conference report available here – https://bit.ly/2UUXU8O

    Conference highlights video available here - https://bit.ly/2SV6BNx

  • 8 Apr 2020 8:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)


    Did you know?

    The Australasian Interprofessional Practice and Education Network (AIPPEN) has existed for well over a decade. A group of co-founders wrote an article about AIPPEN’s shared vision for collaborative interprofessional practice in 2007, published in Focus on Health Professional Education (Vol.8, Issue 3) which can be found at: https://www.anzahpe.org/AIPPEN

    With the revitalisation of AIPPEN at the 2019 ANZAHPE conference in Canberra, comes the opportunity to build stronger interprofessional collaborative connections. Formed at the ANZAHPE conference last year, the AIPPEN Steering Committee aims to: 

    •     create a community of practice around interprofessionalism;
    •     establish a repository for the sharing of resources;
    •     lead interprofessional activities within ANZAHPE; and
    •     link with Interprofessional Global (https://interprofessional.global/).

    Connecting

    If you were on the 2019 AIPPEN mailing list, you will receive an email regarding your interest in staying involved.

    If you want to contribute to this burgeoning network and keep informed, email aippen@anzahpe.org, or A/Prof Fiona Kent, Chair of the AIPPEN Steering Committee, at: fiona.kent@monash.edu

    Calling rural educators and practitioners.

    If you are a rural-based health professional educator or practitioner with a passion for interprofessional collaboration, and you wish to reach out to others similarly inclined, A/Prof Tony Smith at: tony.smith@newcastle.edu.au

  • 8 Apr 2020 6:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)

    Koshila is a Senior Lecturer in the Prideaux Centre and Course Coordinator of the postgraduate programs in Clinical Education at Flinders University. 

    Her main scholarly interests are around faculty development and career pathways in health professions education, and curriculum and pedagogy. Koshila has a specific interest in using theory to explore how health and social care professionals make the transition to education and develop their educational expertise and identity. Koshila is the current Membership Secretary of ANZAHPE. She applied for ANZAHPE Fellowship to support the capacity building of people and teams in health professions education and to further consolidate her connection to this valued professional network.

  • 8 Apr 2020 6:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)

    Dr Charlotte Denniston is a Lecturer of Medical Education in the Department of Medical Education, Melbourne Medical School. 

    Charlotte holds a Bachelor Physiotherapy (Hons) Degree (2008) and PhD in health professions education (2018) from Monash University. 

    Charlotte’s PhD and subsequent research and scholarship has focused on aspects of professional practice such as healthcare communication and professionalism as well as learning in the workplace. 

    Through her teaching and learning work at the University of Melbourne, Monash University, and her previous role as Education Advisor at the College of Intensive Care Medicine, Charlotte has been involved in the professional development of clinical supervisors across the continuum of health professions education (HPE). Charlotte also has an interest in exploring the patient’s voice in HPE.

    Charlotte applied for AFANZAHPE to engage with the supportive mentorship culture provided by the Fellowship scheme, and to build a stronger connection with members of the HPE community across Australia and New Zealand.

  • 8 Apr 2020 6:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)
    Professor Lambert Schuwirth obtained his MD from Maastricht University. In 1991, he joined the Department of Educational Development and Research there, taking up various roles in student assessment: Chairman of the Inter-university and the Local Progress Test Review Committee, the OSCE Review Committee and the Case-based Testing Committee.
    Since the early 2000s, he has been Chair of the overall Taskforce on Assessment. He has been advisor on assessment to medical colleges in the Netherlands and the UK. In 2010, he chaired an international consensus group on educational research, the results of which were published in Medical Teacher.

    Since 2007, he has been a full-professor for Innovative Assessment at Maastricht University – currently as Adjunct. In 2011, he was made a Strategic Professor for Medical Education at Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia and is also the Director of the Flinders University Prideaux Centre for Research in Health Professions Education.

    I am interested in research into modern assessment, assessment as a programme, development of medical expertise. I wanted to become a fellow of ANZHAPE because I want to be part of a collective of scholars and educators and I see a fellowship as a symbol of that community.

  • 8 Apr 2020 6:00 AM | Jill Romeo (Administrator)

    Leila is a session academic in Clinical education in College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University. In this role, she coordinates clinical education Masters program topics, teaches clinical education research skills to students and mentors research projects. She provides academic leadership, engages in research, and designs and delivers intensive workshops and interactive lab-based activities to students, researchers and higher degree research students. Leila has been working as a health research librarian teaching systematic reviews methodology, evidence-based practice in medicine and healthcare, research methodology and study designs, research metrics, and information literacy to medical and allied health students.

    Leila is currently a PhD candidate in health professions education with Prideaux research centre undertaking a doctoral study on translational research in health professions education. 


    The research areas in which she is interested are faculty development, implementing organisational changes, and educational innovations in health professions education context.  Leila is also interested in improving educational capabilities of clinical teachers, educational leadership skills, and scholarly productivity.

    Leila has applied for ANZAHPE Associate Fellowship to improve her expertise in health professions education field, to gain experience and undertake scholarly educational practice and to develop relationships with health professions educations communities in local, national, and international scales.

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