Title: Patient and Family Centered Care Curriculum
1Patient and Family Centered Care Curriculum
- Keith J. Mann
- DeeJo Miller
- Sheryl Chadwick
2Goals
- Improve communication skills with patients and
families - Learn the importance of partnering with families
in the care of their child - Recognize the unique needs of families coping
with a complex needs child and/or child with a
chronic illness - Recognize the barriers that exist for families in
our health care system - Acknowledge personal biases and beliefs while
respecting the cultural and spiritual beliefs of
the family - Identify and promote the unique strengths of the
family - Recognize that the family is the constant in the
childs life - Improve intra-hospital communication between
physicians
3Curriculum Details
- Intern Year
- Orientation lunch with members of the Family
Advisory Board - Intern retreat focused on communication
- Match Day Lunch
- Family resides within 30 minutes of Childrens
Mercy Hospital - Child is lt 12 years of age
- Child has been seen in gt 3 specialty clinics at
CMHC within the past 12 months - Child has a chronic condition that will still be
present in 3 years - Parent/caregiver speaks English
4Orientation Lunch
- Questions to ask residents at the orientation
lunch - What did you like best about medical school?
- Where did you grow up?
- What do you do in your spare time?
- Tell me about your family.
- Is there anything that makes you nervous about
talking to families? - Questions to ask families at the orientation
lunch - In addition to being a parent, what else do you
do? - What does your family like to do for fun?
- Why did you join the FAB?
- Tell me about your family.
- Tell me about a positive experience with a
resident and why you remember this incident. - What is one piece of advice that you would give
to all new residents?
5Curriculum Details
- Second year
- Home visit
- Hematology-Oncology mid-rotation seminar
- Standardized patients
- Third Year
- Office visit
6Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale
SHARING DOMAIN SHARING DOMAIN SHARING DOMAIN
Gender N Mean
Male 9 4.185
Female 23 4.639
7Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale
SHARING DOMAIN SHARING DOMAIN SHARING DOMAIN
Year N Mean
Intern 32 4.52
3rd Yr 18 4.3
8Results of Match Day Lunch and Family Training
Statements rated by Family Educators MEAN SCORE
The training session helped prepare me to be a Family Educator for residents 4.66
I learned something new in the training 4.44
The content of the training was easy for me to understand 4.88
The content of the training seemed applicable to my role as a Family Educator 4.55
The length of the training was appropriate 4.88
I feel prepared to serve in the role as a Family Educator for the residents 4.55
It was helpful to meet with the residents over lunch prior to meeting them in at the home visit (skip if the resident you will be working with was not present) 4.88
After the luncheon I feel more prepared for the home visit 4.44
I am looking forward to my role as a family educator 5.0
9Summary
- Curriculum designed to attitudes, behaviors, and
skills not always addressed in residency training - First year had many successful moments
- Difficult to maintain
- Improvements each year