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Sökning: WFRF:(Lachmann Hanna)

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1.
  • Bexelius, T., et al. (författare)
  • Stress among medical students during clinical courses : a longitudinal study using contextual activity sampling system
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: International Journal of Medical Education. - : IJME. - 2042-6372. ; 10, s. 68-74
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Objectives: To investigate medical students’ experiences of stress and other emotions related to their professional roles, as defined by the CanMEDS framework, by using the Contextual Activity Sampling System (CASS).Methods: Ninety-eight medical students agreed to participate of whom 74 completed this longitudinal cohort study. Data was collected between 6th and 8th term via CASS methodology: A questionnaire was e-mailed to the participants every 3rd week (21questionnaires/measurements) during clinical rotations and scientific project work term. Emotions were measured by a 7-point Likert scale (e.g., maximum stress = 7). Answers were registered through mobile technology. We used a linear mixed-model regression approach to study the association between stress over time in relation to socio-demographic and learning activities related to CanMEDS roles.Results: Participants completed 1390 questionnaires. Mean stress level over all time points was 3.6. Stress was reported as highest during the scientific project term. Learning activities related to ‘Communicator,’ ‘Collaborator,’ ‘Scholar,’ ‘Manager’ and ‘Professional’ were associated with increased stress, e.g. ’Scholar’ increased stress with 0.5 points (t=3.91, p<0.001). A reduced level of stress was associated with ’Health Advocate’ of 0.39 points (t=-2.15, p=0.03). No association between perceived stress and demographic factors, such as gender or age was found.Conclusions: An association between different learning activities related to CanMEDS Roles and feelings of stress were noted. The CASS methodology was found to be useful when observing learning experiences and might support educational development by identifying course activities linked to stress.
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  • Dyar, Anna, et al. (författare)
  • The learning environment on a student ward : an observational study
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Perspectives on medical education. - : Bohn Stafleu van Loghum. - 2212-2761 .- 2212-277X. ; 8:5, s. 276-283
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • INTRODUCTION: Worldwide, a growing number of healthcare students require clinical environments for learning. Some wards have become adapted 'student wards' to meet this demand. Benefits have been reported from the students', supervisors' and patients' perspectives. There is no definition of a student ward, and little research on what the term means. A deeper understanding of the characteristics of student wards is needed to support their use. The aim of this study is to describe what characterises the learning environment on one student ward.METHODS: An ethnographic approach was used for an observational study on a student ward in a hospital in Sweden. Student nurses, supervisors and others on the ward were observed. Field notes were thematically analysed.RESULTS: Four themes were identified: 'Student-led learning' described students learning by actively performing clinical tasks and taking responsibility for patients and for their own learning. 'Learning together' described peer learning and supervision. 'Staff's approach to learning' described personalised relationships between the students and staff and the build-up of trust, the unified inter-professional approach to teaching, and the supervisors' motivation for teaching and for their own learning. 'Student-dedicated space' described the effect of the student room on the learning environment.DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: This study describes the characteristics of a student ward that centred around a community of practice that shared a view of learning as a priority, allowing staff to provide clinical care without compromising students' learning. This qualitative study at a single centre lays the groundwork for future research into other student wards.
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  • Dyar, Anna, et al. (författare)
  • What about the supervisor? Clinical supervisors' role in student nurses' peer learning : a phenomenographic study
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Medical Education. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0308-0110 .- 1365-2923. ; 55:6, s. 713-723
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • INTRODUCTION: Peer learning is increasingly used for healthcare students in the clinical setting. However, as peer learning between students involves students taking a teaching role, it is unclear what the supervisor's role then becomes. It is vital to determine the role of the supervisor in student peer learning to ensure high quality learning and patient safety.METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were performed with 15 student nurse supervisors (nurses and assistant nurses) from two hospital wards that practice peer learning to investigate the different ways clinical supervisors view their role in students' peer learning. Transcribed data were coded and analysed using a phenomenographic approach.RESULTS: Four hierarchical levels of the supervisor's understanding of their role in students' peer learning were identified: the teacher; the facilitator; the stimulator; and the team player. These categories represent an increasingly inclusive view of which people present on the ward play a role in enabling effective peer learning.CONCLUSIONS: The various understandings of supervisor roles have implications for how supervision of peer learning could be implemented in the future.
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  • Kalén, Susanne, et al. (författare)
  • Medical students' experiences of their own professional development during three clinical terms : a prospective follow-up study.
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: BMC Medical Education. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1472-6920. ; 17:1
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: A modern competency-based medical education is well implemented globally, but less is known about how the included learning activities contribute to medical students' professional development. The aim of this study was to explore Swedish medical students' perceptions of the offered learning activities and their experiences of how these activities were connected to their professional development as defined by the CanMEDS framework.METHODS: A prospective mixed method questionnaire study during three terms (internal medicine, scientific project, and surgery) in which data were collected by using contextual activity sampling system, i.e., the students were sent a questionnaire via their mobile phones every third week. All 136 medical students in the 6th of 11 terms in the autumn of 2012 were invited to participate. Seventy-four students (54%) filled in all of the required questionnaires (4 per term) for inclusion, the total number of questionnaires being 1335. The questionnaires focused on the students' experiences of learning activities, especially in relation to the CanMEDS Roles, collaboration with others and emotions (positive, negative, optimal experiences, i.e., "flow") related to the studies. The quantitative data was analysed statistically and, for the open-ended questions, manifest inductive content analysis was used.RESULTS: Three of the CanMEDs Roles, Medical Expert, Scholar, and Communicator, were most frequently reported while the four others, e.g., the role Health Advocate, were less common. Collaboration with students from other professions was most usual during the 8th term. Positive emotions and experience of "flow" were most often reported during clinical learning activities while the scientific project term was connected with more negative emotions.CONCLUSIONS: Our results showed that it is possible, even during clinical courses, to visualise the different areas of professional competence defined in the curriculum and connect these competences to the actual learning activities. Students halfway through their medical education considered the most important learning activities for their professional development to be connected with the Roles of Medical Expert, Scholar, and Communicator. Given that each of the CanMEDS Roles is at least moderately important during undergraduate medical education, the entire spectrum of the Roles should be emphasised and developed during the clinical years.
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6.
  • Lachmann, Hanna, et al. (författare)
  • Academic emotions and attitudes regarding interprofessional collaboration in health care activities : A prospective study among newly arrived physicians participating in a fourteen-week course
  • 2023
  • Ingår i: BMC Medical Education. - 1472-6920. ; 23
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • BACKGROUND: One way of facilitating entrance into the Swedish health care system, for newly arrived physicians from outside the European Union/European Economic Area, could be to set up and offer a course aimed to enhance understanding of it. This course was offered to increase insight about clinical practices, interprofessional teamwork and topics such as, Swedish health care laws, culture, and ethics. Acceptance of, and a flexible attitude towards, interprofessional teamwork are important for maintaining both the physician's professional identity and a high quality of patient care. The aim of this study was to investigate newly arrived physicians', academic emotions, experience of stress and flow during a fourteen-week course, as well as attitudes to interprofessional collaboration, both before and after.METHOD: A prospective study was conducted, with participants asked to respond on one questionnaire every course day, by using the Contextual Activity Sampling System methodology. The participants were asked to complete a questionnaire comprising ten questions about ongoing activity and in what way they experience, e.g., collaboration, interprofessional teamwork, academic emotions, flow, and stress. Furthermore, the participants were asked to score their attitude towards interprofessional teamwork by using the interdisciplinary education perception scale both before and after the course.RESULTS: The total sample comprised 27 qualified physicians, from outside the European Union/European Economic Area. In the interdisciplinary education perception scale category, "perception of actual cooperation¨, the participants had significantly higher scores after the course. Flow and academic emotions were felt mostly during own periods of study, seminars, and lectures. The academic emotions were apathy, anxiety, and boredom. The most frequently experienced academic emotion was apathy. Course participants rated stress highest in connection with the examination.CONCLUSION: The results show that the course had a positive impact on the participants perception of actual cooperation. It appears that participating in this kind of course was a positive experience for the participants, since they mostly experienced high levels of flow. Collaborating with others was experienced as positive, with participants reporting a high degree of flow in activities during collaboration.
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  • Lachmann, Hanna, et al. (författare)
  • Capturing students' learning experiences and academic emotions at an interprofessional training ward
  • 2013
  • Ingår i: Journal of Interprofessional Care. - : Informa UK Limited. - 1356-1820 .- 1469-9567. ; 27:2, s. 137-145
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • An important goal for interprofessional education (IPE) in clinical settings is to support healthcare students in collaboratively developing their understanding of interprofessional teamwork. The aim of this study was to investigate students' learning experiences and academic emotions as they occur in actual context in relation to collaborative and trialogical activities during a clinical IPE course. The contextual activity sampling system methodology was used to collect data via mobile phones. Thirty-seven healthcare students (medical, nursing, physiotherapy and occupational therapy) reported their experiences, learning activities and academic emotions several times a day via their mobile phones during their 2-week course at an interprofessional training ward (IPTW). The results provided understanding of the students' experiences of their academic emotions and how they created new knowledge collaboratively. These collaborative knowledge creation activities occurred mostly when students from different professions were collaborating as a team (e.g. discussing patient care or participating in a ward round) and were also significantly related to optimal experiences, i.e. "flow" (high challenge in combination with high competence). In conclusion, these results emphasize the importance of collaboration among students during IPTW courses. Our results might help to optimize the design of IPE learning activities in clinical healthcare contexts
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  • Lachmann, Hanna (författare)
  • Contextual activity sampling : a method to develop clinical interprofessional education
  • 2013
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Higher health care education in interprofessional settings is evaluated and developed continuously. The aim of clinical interprofessional education is to provide healthcare students opportunities to develop their professional roles, and understanding of other professions, as well as to develop their teamwork and communication skills. However, there is still a need to improve understanding of how students experience their learning. Most often, post-course questionnaires and interviews are used to investigate students’ experiences of their learning activities. When using such approaches the respondents generalize about their experiences in retrospect instead of reporting on learning as it occurs. The Contextual Activity Sampling System (CASS) is a methodology inspired by ideas from the Experience Sampling Method (ESM). CASS was designed to collect frequent data from the participants’ ongoing learning activities by using mobile phones, which was the main methodology used in this thesis.The overall aim of this thesis was to investigate the potential of contextual activity sampling as an approach for studying students’ experiences connected to learning activities during clinical interprofessional education.Eighty-one students from six interprofessional training ward courses conducted during 2009 agreed to participate. For each course, students from two teams of three were randomly assigned to be included in an intervention group (using CASS, n=54) and from one team in a control group (not using CASS, n=27). The students’ learning experiences in the intervention group were collected via CASS and, for both groups, via interviews after the conducted courses and also RIPLS questionnaires both before and after the conducted courses. Study I was a study aiming at investigating the usability of CASS as a methodology in a clinical interprofessional context. Study II focused on the students’ experiences of clinical learning and Study III on the students’ experiences of collaboration. Study IV investigated whether students using CASS experienced their learning activities in different ways compared to students not using CASS.In Study I it was shown that the translated and cross-culturally adapted Swedish version of CASS was usable in a clinical learning environment and that it helped students to structure their study days and reflect on their learning activities. Study II demonstrated that students reported optimal experiences (flow) when they were engaged in knowledge creation activities and collaborated with their fellow students. A significant correlation was identified between positive emotions and how important the activities were considered to be. Study III showed that CASS provided possibilities to identify the student teams’ need of support to attain the intended learning outcomes and highlighted the importance of structure, interaction and insight in clinical interprofessional collaboration. In Study IV differences between the intervention and control groups were noted. The students who had used CASS rated their experience of ‘teamwork and collaboration’ significantly higher after the course than before the course, which was not the case for the control group. On the other hand, students in the control group rated stress higher than those who had used CASS.In conclusion, this thesis showed that the CASS methodology is suitable for collecting contextual data in clinical settings and can help students to structure their days and reflect on their learning activities. When interprofessional collaboration was working well it was associated with knowledge creation and an increased feeling of ‘flow’. CASS is an innovative methodology, which can be useful for stimulating reflection on clinical learning activities and development of clinical interprofessional education.
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9.
  • Lachmann, Hanna, et al. (författare)
  • Dual use of instruments for assessing nursing students professional- and clinical competence
  • 2021
  • Ingår i: Nurse Education Today. - : Elsevier. - 0260-6917 .- 1532-2793. ; 96
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Background: Changes in demographics and the development of health systems have a direct impact on patients' nursing needs and nurses' ability to meet them. Modern and forward-looking nursing education programmes that will help nursing students to develop their professional competence require useful tools for assessment and self-reflection that can be combined in theoretical and clinical education. Objectives: To investigate the associations between the Nurse Professional Competence Scale - Short Form (NPC-SF), and the tool Assessment of Clinical Education (AssCE) tool, and to assess the graduating students' professional competence based on their self-assessment. Design: A cross-sectional descriptive study design was used. Participants and settings: A total of 151 nursing students at a Swedish university college completed the NPC-SF and the AssCE (response rate 77%). Methods: In their final weeks of the nursing programme, students were invited to respond to two questionnaires: the NPC Scale - Short Form (35 items) and the AssCE tool (21 items). Result: There are significant correlations between the nursing students' responses to the NPC-SF competence areas and the AssCE areas (r = 0.19-0.57). Students score in the NPC-SF were highest in Value-based Nursing Care and lowest in Development, Leadership and Organization of Nursing Care, and in the AssCE areas student scores were highest in Examination and treatment and Professional Approach and lowest in Management and Cooperation. Conclusion: The NPC-SF and AssCE are valid and reliable instruments, showing a high level of correlation. Results imply that dual use could strengthen student-centred theoretical and clinical learning as well as professional competence development. Additional research is needed to assess student's competence development during the nursing program.
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