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Listening to and learning from the family carer’s story: an innovative approach in interprofessional education

Listening to and learning from the family carer’s story: an innovative approach in interprofessional education
Listening to and learning from the family carer’s story: an innovative approach in interprofessional education
Meeting family carers who recount their experiences of being on the receiving end of health and social care provides a 'real life' context in which undergraduate students from different professions can explore together and learn about interprofessional care and teamwork. This paper draws on data from a three-month in-depth evaluation of palliative care workshops in which medical, nursing, social work and rehabilitation therapy students interview family carers who are caring for someone with a terminal illness or who have recently been bereaved. The evaluation showed that students responded positively to 'real world' learning and coped well when carers were upset or recounted distressing incidents. Meeting the carer had a profound impact on the students- to the extent that some said they were 'changed' by the experience and felt it would significantly influence their professional behaviour. Hearing the carer's story also allowed them to pinpoint new and significant insights into their own profession and into healthcare provision generally. Family carers' views of their experience of the workshops were also sought and they too reported benefits from meeting the students. They found the experience cathartic and therapeutic and were both surprised and impressed by the maturity of the students who were able to respond to their distress. The paper also discusses the practicalities involved in recruiting the carers, issues of preparation and debriefing and lessons which will be useful to others who may wish to involve family carers in education.
387-395
Turner, Pauline
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Sheldon, Frances
ba4d5270-cda4-4ca6-868e-3e8475695656
Coles, Colin
b08f6c44-7b98-42a0-8afd-c53522f7b56c
Mountford, Brenda
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Hillier, Richard
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Radway, Patricia
87162796-3623-426a-af6c-5e8db681a9db
Wee, Bee
5951b0ee-bbbe-4200-b0a5-89c0ff80d3e6
Turner, Pauline
4aa9fff7-2de2-4431-89fe-2122a624a8ec
Sheldon, Frances
ba4d5270-cda4-4ca6-868e-3e8475695656
Coles, Colin
b08f6c44-7b98-42a0-8afd-c53522f7b56c
Mountford, Brenda
6c2ab8d3-9e5a-49ea-be1f-b060a3fb3a7a
Hillier, Richard
972b1543-ed8b-40f9-9d94-4e5b4ec49931
Radway, Patricia
87162796-3623-426a-af6c-5e8db681a9db
Wee, Bee
5951b0ee-bbbe-4200-b0a5-89c0ff80d3e6

Turner, Pauline, Sheldon, Frances, Coles, Colin, Mountford, Brenda, Hillier, Richard, Radway, Patricia and Wee, Bee (2000) Listening to and learning from the family carer’s story: an innovative approach in interprofessional education. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 14 (4), 387-395. (doi:10.1080/13561820020003937).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Meeting family carers who recount their experiences of being on the receiving end of health and social care provides a 'real life' context in which undergraduate students from different professions can explore together and learn about interprofessional care and teamwork. This paper draws on data from a three-month in-depth evaluation of palliative care workshops in which medical, nursing, social work and rehabilitation therapy students interview family carers who are caring for someone with a terminal illness or who have recently been bereaved. The evaluation showed that students responded positively to 'real world' learning and coped well when carers were upset or recounted distressing incidents. Meeting the carer had a profound impact on the students- to the extent that some said they were 'changed' by the experience and felt it would significantly influence their professional behaviour. Hearing the carer's story also allowed them to pinpoint new and significant insights into their own profession and into healthcare provision generally. Family carers' views of their experience of the workshops were also sought and they too reported benefits from meeting the students. They found the experience cathartic and therapeutic and were both surprised and impressed by the maturity of the students who were able to respond to their distress. The paper also discusses the practicalities involved in recruiting the carers, issues of preparation and debriefing and lessons which will be useful to others who may wish to involve family carers in education.

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Published date: 2000

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 33638
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33638
PURE UUID: 37f219b3-e544-48f1-b930-314a985f8880

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:45

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Contributors

Author: Pauline Turner
Author: Frances Sheldon
Author: Colin Coles
Author: Brenda Mountford
Author: Richard Hillier
Author: Patricia Radway
Author: Bee Wee

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