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1.
Augment Altern Commun ; : 1-12, 2023 Dec 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38047627

RESUMO

Children who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) are multimodal communicators. However, in classroom interactions involving children and staff, achieving mutual understanding and accomplishing task-oriented goals by attending to the child's unaided AAC can be challenging. This study draws on excerpts of video recordings of interactions in a classroom for 6-9-year-old children who used AAC to explore how three child participants used the range of multimodal resources available to them - vocal, movement-based, and gestural, technological, temporal - to shape (and to some degree, co-control) classroom interactions. Our research was concerned with examining achievements and problems in establishing a sense of common ground and the realization of child agency. Through detailed multimodal analysis, this paper renders visible different types of practices rejecting a request for clarification, drawing new parties into a conversation, disrupting whole-class teacher talk-through which the children in the study voiced themselves in persuasive ways. It concludes by suggesting that multimodal accounts paint a more nuanced picture of children's resourcefulness and conversational asymmetry that highlights children's agency amidst material, semiotic, and institutional constraints.

2.
Disabil Rehabil ; : 1-10, 2023 Aug 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37652081

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Parent and therapist engagement and partnership are critical in early intervention physiotherapy and occupational therapy for infants with cerebral palsy to improve outcomes. The main aim of this study was to understand how parents perceive their engagement experience in early intervention over time. METHODS: Grounded theory methodology was used. Twenty parents of diverse backgrounds participated in 22 interviews (including some repeated longitudinally) to reflect on their engagement experience within the context of early intervention community services provided in the UK NHS. RESULTS: The findings highlight how parents' perspectives of their engagement in EI change according to critical circumstances, including their preceding neonatal trauma, the at-risk CP label, firmer diagnosis of CP and their child's response to intervention. We theorise that this disrupted transition experience to parenthood becomes part of parental framing (or sense-making) of their engagement in EI. Overlapping frames of uncertainty, pursuit and transformation capture and explain nuances in parents' engagement patterns within EI over time. CONCLUSION: This theorising has implications for early intervention therapists in how they engage in the lives of families and partner with parents to support healthier parental transition, wellbeing and subsequent improved infant outcomes.


New insights are provided into how recent advances to prognostic practices for infants with cerebral palsy affect parental perspectives and their engagement experience in early interventionThe paper's organising concepts support a clearer understanding for early intervention practitioners of this complex parent experienceEarly intervention practitioners are encouraged to reflect upon their practice as they engage in families' lives and partner with parents during this challenging period to optimise outcomes.

3.
Med Educ ; 57(10): 939-948, 2023 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36924016

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: A workplace-based assessment (WBA) is a learning recording device that is widely used in medical education globally. Although entrenched in medical curricula, and despite a substantial body of literature exploring them, it is not yet fully understood how WBAs play out in practice. Adopting a constructivist standpoint, we examine these assessments, in the workplace, using principles based upon naturalist inquiry, drawing from a theoretical framework based on Goffman's dramaturgical analogy for the presentation of self, and using qualitative research methods to articulate what is happening as learners complete them. METHODS: Learners were voluntarily recruited to participate in the study from a single teaching hospital. Data were generated, in-situ, through observations with field notes and audiovisual recording of WBAs, along with accompanying interviews with learners. RESULTS: Data from six learners was analysed to reveal a set of general principles-the WBA playbook. These four principles were tacit, unwritten, unofficial and learners applied them to complete their WBA proformas: (1) maintain the impression of progression, (2) manage the authenticity of the individual proforma, (3) avoid losing face with the assessor and (4) complete the proforma in an effort-efficient way. By adhering to these principles, learners expressed their understanding of their social position in their world at that time the documents were created. DISCUSSION: This paper recognises the value of the WBA as a lived experience, and of the WBA document as a social space, where learners engage in a social performance before the readers of the proforma. Such an interpretation better represents what happens as learners undergo and record WBAs in the real-world, recognising WBAs as learner-centred, learner-driven, meaning-making phenomena. In this way, as a record of interpretation and meanings, the subjective nature of the WBA process is a strength to be harnessed, rather than a weakness to be glossed over.


Assuntos
Educação Médica , Avaliação Educacional , Humanos , Avaliação Educacional/métodos , Competência Clínica , Local de Trabalho , Aprendizagem
4.
Child Care Health Dev ; 48(3): 359-377, 2022 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34622968

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Emphasis on parental engagement strategies within occupational therapy and physiotherapy early intervention (EI) programmes for infants at high risk of cerebral palsy (CP) has increased. This reflects consensus that increasing parent participation enhances treatment efficacy, potentially improving infant and parent outcomes. However, evaluation of parental engagement in EI is complex. Despite the growing application of parental engagement strategies, aligned with family-centred care practice, theoretical evaluation is currently lacking within the literature. This realist synthesis aimed to identify component theories underlying EI strategies to support parental engagement and to use empirical findings to evaluate how these work in practice. METHODS: Realist synthesis: Databases Medline, Embase, Amed, CINAHL and PsychInfo were searched (from February 1985 - February 2020); further articles were sourced from reference lists. A data extraction form was used, and a Critical Appraisal Skills Programme tool was used to assess study rigour. RESULTS: Twenty-six articles were included. Quality of relationships, parent education and intervention co-design were the key themes related to parental engagement strategies. Findings indicate that constructive parent reasoning mechanisms of trust, belief, sense of control, perceived feasibility of home programme delivery and ultimately motivation are linked to the underlying intervention resources afforded by specific strategies (e.g., coaching pedagogy). These responses are precursors to engagement outcomes that include increased parental self-efficacy and adherence. Importantly, parental self-efficacy can initiate a process of change leading to improved parental confidence and anxiety. CONCLUSIONS: Sensitively designed programme strategies, centred on relational quality between parent, infant and therapist, are fundamental for effective parent connection, involvement and investment within EI for infants with CP.


Assuntos
Paralisia Cerebral , Ansiedade , Paralisia Cerebral/terapia , Intervenção Educacional Precoce , Humanos , Lactente , Pais/educação , Autoeficácia
5.
Acad Med ; 92(4): 544-549, 2017 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28351068

RESUMO

PURPOSE: To make explicit the attitudes and values of a community of surgeons, with the aim of understanding professional identity construction within a specific group of residents. METHOD: Using a grounded theory method, the authors collected data from 16 postgraduate surgeons through interviews. They complemented these initial interview data with ethnographic observations and additional descriptive interviews to explore the attitudes and values learned by surgeons during residency training (2010-2013). The participants were attending surgeons and residents in a general surgical training program in a university teaching hospital in the United Kingdom. RESULTS: Participating surgeons described learning personal values or attitudes that they regarded as core to "becoming a surgeon" and key to professional identity construction. They described learning to be a perfectionist, to be accountable, and to self-manage and be resilient. They discussed learning to be self-critical, sometimes with the unintended consequence of seeming neurotic. They described learning effective teamwork as well as learning to take initiative and be innovative, which enabled them to demonstrate leadership and drive actions and agendas forward within the health care organization where they worked. CONCLUSIONS: To the authors' knowledge, this is the first study to systematically explore the learning of professional identity amongst postgraduate surgeons. The study contributes to the literature on professional identity construction within medical education. The authors conclude that the demise of the apprenticeship model and the rise of duty hours limitations may affect not only the acquisition of technical skills but, more important, the construction of surgeon professional identity.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Escolha da Profissão , Autoimagem , Identificação Social , Valores Sociais , Cirurgiões , Adulto , Feminino , Teoria Fundamentada , Hospitais de Ensino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Reino Unido
7.
Med Educ ; 51(1): 105-113, 2017 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27785819

RESUMO

AIM: The aim of this paper is to explore what might be gained from collecting and analysing visual data, such as photographs, scans, drawings, video and screen recordings, in clinical educational research. Its focus is on visual research that looks at teaching and learning 'as it naturally occurs' in the work place, in simulation centres and other sites, and also involves the collection and analysis of visual learning materials circulating in these sites. BACKGROUND: With the ubiquity of digital recording devices, video data and visual learning materials are now relatively cheap to collect. Compared to other domains of education research visual materials are not widely used in clinical education research. The paper sets out to identify and reflect on the possibilities for visual research using examples from an ethnographic study on surgical and inter-professional learning in the operating theatres of a London hospital. MAIN CONTRIBUTION: The paper shows how visual research enables recognition, analysis and critical evaluation of (1) the hidden curriculum, such as the meanings implied by embodied, visible actions of clinicians; (2) the ways in which clinical teachers design multimodal learning environments using a range of modes of communication available to them, combining, for instance, gesture and speech; (3) the informal assessment of clinical skills, and the intricate relation between trainee performance and supervisor feedback; (4) the potentialities and limitations of different visual learning materials, such as textbooks and videos, for representing medical knowledge. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The paper concludes with theoretical and methodological reflections on what can be made visible, and therefore available for analysis, explanation and evaluation if visual materials are used for clinical education research, and what remains unaccounted for if written language remains the dominant mode in the research cycle. Opportunities for quantitative analysis and ethical implications are also discussed.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Biomédica , Competência Clínica , Ensino , Gravação de Videoteipe/métodos , Antropologia Cultural , Comunicação , Currículo , Educação Médica , Retroalimentação , Humanos , Londres , Materiais de Ensino
8.
J Adv Nurs ; 72(2): 361-72, 2016 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26541137

RESUMO

AIM: To explore the unsettling effects of increased mobility of nurses, surgeons and other healthcare professionals on communication and learning in the operating theatre. BACKGROUND: Increasingly, healthcare professionals step in and out of newly formed transient teams and work with colleagues they have not met before, unsettling previously relatively stable team work based on shared, local knowledge accumulated over significant periods of close collaboration. DESIGN: An ethnographic case study was conducted of the operating theatre department of a major teaching hospital in London. METHOD: Video recordings were made of 20 operations, involving different teams. The recordings were systematically reviewed and coded. Instances where difficulties arose in the communication between scrub nurse and surgeons were identified and subjected to detailed, interactional analysis. FINDINGS: Instrument requests frequently prompted clarification from the scrub nurse (e.g. 'Sorry, what did you want?'). Such requests were either followed by a relatively elaborate clarification, designed to maximize learning opportunities, or a by a relatively minimal clarification, designed to achieve the immediate task at hand. CONCLUSIONS: Significant variation exists in the degree of support given to scrub nurses requesting clarification. Some surgeons experience such requests as disruptions, while others treat them as opportunities to build shared knowledge.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Comunicação , Comportamento Cooperativo , Recursos Humanos de Enfermagem Hospitalar/psicologia , Salas Cirúrgicas/métodos , Cirurgiões/psicologia , Ensino/métodos , Adulto , Idoso , Competência Clínica , Feminino , Hospitais de Ensino , Hospitais Urbanos , Humanos , Relações Interprofissionais , Londres , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente/organização & administração
9.
ANZ J Surg ; 86(10): 751-755, 2016 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25182451

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The aim of the study was to gain insight in the involvement of non-operating surgeons in intraoperative surgical decision making at a teaching hospital. The decision to proceed to clip and cut the cystic duct during laparoscopic cholecystectomy was investigated through direct observation of team work. METHOD: Eleven laparoscopic cholecystectomies performed by consultant surgeons and specialty trainees at a London teaching hospital were audio and video recorded. Talk among the surgical team was transcribed and subjected to linguistic analysis, in conjunction with observational analysis of the video material, sequentially marking the unfolding operation. RESULTS: Two components of decision making were identified, participation and rationalization. Participation refers to the degree to which agreement was sought within the surgical team prior to clipping the cystic duct. Rationalization refers to the degree to which the evidential grounds for clipping and cutting were verbalized. CONCLUSION: The decision to clip and cut the cystic duct was jointly made by members of the surgical team, rather than a solitary surgeon in the majority of cases, involving verbal explication of clinical reasoning and verbal agreement. The extent of joint decision making appears to have been mitigated by two factors: trainee's level of training and duration of the case.


Assuntos
Colecistectomia Laparoscópica/psicologia , Tomada de Decisão Clínica/métodos , Ducto Cístico/cirurgia , Relações Interprofissionais , Equipe de Assistência ao Paciente , Comportamento Verbal , Colecistectomia Laparoscópica/métodos , Comportamento Cooperativo , Hospitais de Ensino , Humanos , Período Intraoperatório , Linguística , Londres , Racionalização , Gravação em Vídeo
10.
Med Educ ; 49(11): 1103-16, 2015 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26494063

RESUMO

CONTEXT: The ability to interpret visual cues is important in many medical specialties, including surgery, in which poor outcomes are largely attributable to errors of perception rather than poor motor skills. However, we know little about how trainee surgeons learn to make judgements in the visual domain. OBJECTIVES: We explored how trainees learn visual cue interpretation in the operating room. METHODS: A multiple case study design was used. Participants were postgraduate surgical trainees and their trainers. Data included observer field notes, and integrated video- and audio-recordings from 12 cases representing more than 11 hours of observation. A constant comparative methodology was used to identify dominant themes. RESULTS: Visual cue interpretation was a recurrent feature of trainer-trainee interactions and was achieved largely through the pedagogic mechanism of co-construction. Co-construction was a dialogic sequence between trainer and trainee in which they explored what they were looking at together to identify and name structures or pathology. Co-construction took two forms: 'guided co-construction', in which the trainer steered the trainee to see what the trainer was seeing, and 'authentic co-construction', in which neither trainer nor trainee appeared certain of what they were seeing and pieced together the information collaboratively. Whether the co-construction activity was guided or authentic appeared to be influenced by case difficulty and trainee seniority. Co-construction was shown to occur verbally, through discussion, and also through non-verbal exchanges in which gestures made with laparoscopic instruments contributed to the co-construction discourse. CONCLUSIONS: In the training setting, learning visual cue interpretation occurs in part through co-construction. Co-construction is a pedagogic phenomenon that is well recognised in the context of learning to interpret verbal information. In articulating the features of co-construction in the visual domain, this work enables the development of explicit pedagogic strategies for maximising trainees' learning of visual cue interpretation. This is relevant to multiple medical specialties in which judgements must be based on visual information.


Assuntos
Sinais (Psicologia) , Julgamento , Aprendizagem , Cirurgiões/educação , Percepção Visual , Competência Clínica , Comportamento Cooperativo , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Laparoscopia/métodos , Cirurgiões/psicologia
11.
J Adv Nurs ; 71(12): 2763-74, 2015 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26243722

RESUMO

AIMS: To observe the extent and the detail with which playing music can impact on communication in the operating theatre. BACKGROUND: According to the cited sources, music is played in 53-72% of surgical operations performed. Noise levels in the operating theatre already exceed World Health Organisation recommendations. There is currently a divide in opinions on the playing of music in operating theatres, with few studies conducted and no policies or guidance provided. DESIGN: An ethnographic observational study of teamwork in operating theatres through video recordings. Quantitative and qualitative data analysis approaches were used. METHODS: This study was conducted between 2012-2013 in the UK. Video recordings of 20 operations over six months in two operating theatres were captured. The recordings were divided into music and non-music playing cases. Each case was logged using a request/response sequence identified through interactional analysis. Statistical analysis, using a χ(2) , explored the difference between the proportion of request repetitions and whether music was playing or not. Further interactional analysis was conducted for each request repetition. RESULTS: Request/response observations (N = 5203) were documented. A chi-square test revealed that repeated requests were five times more likely to occur in cases that played music than those that did not. A repeated request can add 4-68 seconds each to operation time and increased tensions due to frustration at ineffective communication. CONCLUSIONS: Music played in the operating theatre can interfere with team communication, yet is seldom recognized as a potential safety hazard. Decisions around whether music is played and around the choice of music and its volume, are determined largely by surgeons. Frank discussions between clinicians, managers, patients and governing bodies should be encouraged for recommendations and guidance to be developed.


Assuntos
Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Comunicação , Corpo Clínico Hospitalar/psicologia , Música/psicologia , Ruído Ocupacional/efeitos adversos , Salas Cirúrgicas , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos de Casos Organizacionais , Inquéritos e Questionários , Reino Unido
12.
Acad Med ; 90(8): 1125-31, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25922919

RESUMO

PURPOSE: The authors aimed to map and explicate what surgeons perceive they learn in the operating room. METHOD: The researchers used a grounded theory method in which data were iteratively collected through semistructured one-to-one interviews in 2010 and 2011 at four participating hospital sites. A four-person data analysis team from differing academic backgrounds qualitatively analyzed the content of the transcripts employing an immersion/crystallization approach. RESULTS: Participants were 22 UK surgeons, some of whom were in training at the time of the study and some of whom were attending surgeons. Major themes of learning in the operating room were perceived to be factual knowledge, motor skills, sensory semiosis, adaptive strategies, team working and management, and attitudes and behaviors. The analysis team classified 277 data points (short paragraphs or groups of sentences conveying meaning) under these major themes and subthemes. A key component of learning in the operating room that emerged from these data was sensory semiosis, defined as learning to make sense of visual and haptic cues. CONCLUSIONS: Although the authors found that learning in the operating room occurred across a wide range of domains, sensory semiosis was found to be an important theme that has not previously been fully acknowledged or discussed in the surgical literature. The discussion draws on the wider literature from the social sciences and cognitive psychology literature to examine how professionals learn to make meaning from "signs" making parallels with other medical specialties.


Assuntos
Sinais (Psicologia) , Aprendizagem , Salas Cirúrgicas , Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Competência Clínica , Feminino , Cirurgia Geral/educação , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Entrevistas como Assunto , Conhecimento , Londres , Masculino , Destreza Motora , Pesquisa Qualitativa
13.
Int J Nurs Stud ; 51(9): 1195-206, 2014 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24508284

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: One of the most central collaborative tasks during surgical operations is the passing of objects, including instruments. Little is known about how nurses and surgeons achieve this. The aim of the present study was to explore what factors affect this routine-like task, resulting in fast or slow transfer of objects. METHODS: A qualitative video study, informed by an observational ethnographic approach, was conducted in a major teaching hospital in the UK. A total of 20 general surgical operations were observed. In total, approximately 68 h of video data have been reviewed. A subsample of 225 min has been analysed in detail using interactional video-analysis developed within the social sciences. RESULTS: Two factors affecting object transfer were observed: (1) relative instrument trolley position and (2) alignment. The scrub nurse's instrument trolley position (close to vs. further back from the surgeon) and alignment (gaze direction) impacts on the communication with the surgeon, and consequently, on the speed of object transfer. When the scrub nurse was standing close to the surgeon, and "converged" to follow the surgeon's movements, the transfer occurred more seamlessly and faster (<1.0 s) than when the scrub nurse was standing further back from the surgeon and did not follow the surgeon's movements (>1.0 s). CONCLUSIONS: The smoothness of object transfer can be improved by adjusting the scrub nurse's instrument trolley position, enabling a better monitoring of surgeon's bodily conduct and affording early orientation (awareness) to an upcoming request (changing situation). Object transfer is facilitated by the surgeon's embodied practices, which can elicit the nurse's attention to the request and, as a response, maximise a faster object transfer. A simple intervention to highlight the significance of these factors could improve communication in the operating theatre.


Assuntos
Cirurgia Geral , Enfermagem Perioperatória , Comunicação , Salas Cirúrgicas , Instrumentos Cirúrgicos , Gravação em Vídeo
14.
World J Surg ; 36(9): 2011-4, 2012 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22653182

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: One important form of surgical training for residents is their participation in actual operations, for instance as an assistant or supervised surgeon. The aim of this study was to explore what participation in operations entails and how it might be described and analyzed. METHODS: A qualitative study was undertaken in a major teaching hospital in London. A total of 122 general surgical operations were observed. A subsample of 14 laparoscopic cholecystectomies involving one or more residents was analyzed in detail. Audio and video recordings of eight operations were transcribed and analyzed linguistically. RESULTS: The degree of participation of trainees frequently shifted as the operation progressed to the next stage. Participation also varied within each stage. When trainees operated under supervision, the supervisors constantly adjusted their degree of control over the resident's operative maneuvers. CONCLUSIONS: Classifications such as "assistant" and "supervised surgeon" describing a trainee's overall participation in an operation potentially misrepresent the varying involvement of resident and supervisor. Video recordings provide a useful alternative for documenting and analyzing actual participation in operations.


Assuntos
Colecistectomia Laparoscópica/educação , Cirurgia Geral/classificação , Internato e Residência , Colecistectomia Laparoscópica/métodos , Competência Clínica , Cirurgia Geral/organização & administração , Humanos , Gravação em Fita , Gravação em Vídeo
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