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Attaining Competency in Assessing Pain

Attaining Competency in Assessing Pain. Michael J. Mintzer, Chairperson Steering Committee Florida’s Teaching Nursing Home. Attaining Competency in Assessing Pain. Value Focuses on skills Competency at the bedside Model of a method for skills training Simulation. habitually.

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Attaining Competency in Assessing Pain

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  1. Attaining Competency inAssessing Pain Michael J. Mintzer, Chairperson Steering Committee Florida’s Teaching Nursing Home

  2. Attaining Competency inAssessing Pain Value • Focuses on skills • Competency at the bedside • Model of a method for skills training • Simulation

  3. habitually The Goal: Competency The ability to apply particular … knowledge, skills, and attitudes … to the standard of performance required … in a specified context

  4. Attaining Competency inAssessing Pain What is this PIC? • A DVD-based curriculum • Also usable on computer • Designed for adult learners • Uses blended-learning • Uses simulation as instructional method • Geared for trainers, helpful for learners

  5. Target: Instructors and learners • Designed to show instructors how to use a (new) method to teach skills: simulation • Assessing pain • Giving feedback • This is highly interactive training! • Students can view it to learn what is expected of them during training

  6. Highly Aligned Performance Improvement Curriculum in Assessing Pain • Learning Objectives • Instructional Material • Blended Learning • Multimedia • Web access • Student assessment • Written • Supervisor observed

  7. Pain Curriculum Learning Objectives • You will recognize that pain is a significant problem in nursing home residents by asking if pain is present • You will show empathy toward residents in pain by using appropriate language • You will choose an appropriate pain-rating tool from among three rating-tool options • You will appropriately administer and score each of the three pain-rating tools

  8. Traditional Learning Blended Learning E-learning Adult Learnersand Blended Learning • Adults learn what they need to know when they need to know it! • Efficient at improving KSAs • Cost-effective • Attractive (satisfaction) • Diverse learning styles

  9. Instruction MethodSimulation – Role Playing Learning new skills using simulation: • Allows the learner to make errors • Mistakes are expected! • The culture of education needs to change • No patients are harmed or inconvenienced during the training • Learners can focus on acquiring skills • Students do it until they get it right!

  10. Competency Assessmentat the Bedside

  11. Play DVD (Scene 8)

  12. Summary – PIC in Assessing Pain • It is a curriculum for teaching a skill • It demonstrates pain assessment and feedback skills • It is a model for other skills training • It has high level expectations • It includes the supervisors assessment tool • It is best used when high value skills outcomes are needed

  13. Role-Playing Tips • Mistakes ARE expected • When a mistake happens, be encouraging • Laugh a lot – with, not at the learner • The script is important but don’t memorize it • For a first time learner, guarantee success by using a simple introduction as the first role-play exercise • Keep it short – 20-30 seconds seems like an eternity for a learner • Stay “in role” during the training. The learner is “learning” when they are uncertain • Give feedback positively • Even for the smallest error, the entire exercise is repeated • Remind learners that they are doing this to become better care providers for their residents

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