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Pain | 2008

An Interfaculty Pain Curriculum: Lessons learned from six years experience

Judith P. Hunter; Judy Watt-Watson; Michael McGillion; Lalitha Raman-Wilms; Lynn Cockburn; Leila Lax; Jennifer Stinson; Andrea J. Cameron; Thuan Dao; Peter S. Pennefather; Martin Schreiber; Larry Librach; Tricia Kavanagh; Allan Gordon; Nora Cullen; David Mock; Michael W. Salter

Abstract Minimal pain content has been documented in pre‐licensure curricula and students lack important pain knowledge at graduation. To address this problem, we have implemented and evaluated a mandatory Interfaculty Pain Curriculum (IPC) yearly since 2002 for students (N = 817 in 2007) from six Health Science Faculties/Departments. The 20‐h pain curriculum continues to involve students from Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, Physical Therapy, and Occupational Therapy as part of their 2nd or 3rd year program. Evaluation methods based on Kirkpatrick’s model now include evaluation of a Comprehensive Pain Management Plan along with the previously used Pain Knowledge and Beliefs Questionnaire (PKPQ) and Daily Content and Process Questionnaires (DCPQ). Important lessons have been learned and subsequent changes made in this iterative curriculum design based on extensive evaluation over the 6‐year period. Modifications have included case development more relevant to the diverse student groups, learning contexts that are uni‐, inter‐, and multi‐professional, and facilitator development in working with interprofessional student groups. PKBQ scores have improved in all years with a statistically significant average change on correct responses from 14% to 17%. The DCPQ responses have also indicated consistently that most students (85–95%) rated highly the patient panel, expert‐lead clinically focused sessions, and small interprofessional groups. Relevancy and organization of the information presented have been generally rated highly from 80.3% to 91.2%. This curriculum continues to be a unique and valuable learning opportunity as we utilize lessons learned from extensive evaluation to move the pain agenda forward with pre‐licensure health science students.


Pain Research & Management | 2011

Innovation and Design of a Web-Based Pain Education Interprofessional Resource

Leila Lax; Judy Watt-Watson; Michelle Lui; Adam Dubrowski; Michael McGillion; Judith P. Hunter; Cameron MacLennan; Kerry Knickle; Anja Robb; Jaime Lapeyre

INTRODUCTION The present article describes educational innovation processes and design of a web-based pain interprofessional resource for prelicensure health science students in universities across Canada. Operationalization of educational theory in design coupled with formative evaluation of design are discussed, along with strategies that support collaborative innovation. METHODS Educational design was driven by content, theory and evaluation. Pain misbeliefs and teaching points along the continuum from acute to persistent pain were identified. Knowledge-building theory, situated learning, reflection and novel designs for cognitive scaffolding were then employed. Design research principles were incorporated to inform iterative and ongoing design. RESULTS An authentic patient case was constructed, situated in interprofessional complex care to highlight learning objectives related to pre-operative, postoperative and treatment up to one year, for a surgical cancer patient. Pain mechanisms, assessment and management framed content creation. Knowledge building scaffolds were used, which included video simulations, embedded resources, concurrent feedback, practice-based reflective exercises and commentaries. Scaffolds were refined to specifically support knowledge translation. Illustrative commentaries were designed to explicate pain misbeliefs and best practices. Architecture of the resource was mapped; a multimedia, interactive prototype was created. This pain education resource was developed primarily for individual use, with extensions for interprofessional collective discourse. DISCUSSION Translation of curricular content scripts into representation maps supported the collaborative design process by establishing a common visual language. The web-based prototype will be formatively and summatively evaluated to assess pedagogic design, knowledge-translation scaffolds, pain knowledge gains, relevance, feasibility and fidelity of this educational innovation.


Academic Medicine | 2009

Scaffolding knowledge building in a Web-based communication and cultural competence program for international medical graduates.

Leila Lax; M Lynn Russell; Laura Jayne Nelles; Cathy M. Smith

Background Professional behaviors, tacitly understood by Canadian-trained physicians, are difficult to teach and often create practice barriers for IMGs. The purpose of this design research study was to develop a Web-based program simulating Canadian medical literacy and culture, and to evaluate strategies of scaffolding individual knowledge building. Method Study 1 (N = 20) examined usability and pedagogic design. Studies 2 (N = 39) and 3 (N = 33) examined case participation patterns. Results Model design was validated in Study 1. Studies 2 and 3 demonstrated high levels of participation, on unprompted third tries, on knowledge tests. Recursive patterns were strongest on Reflective Exercises. Five strategies scaffolded knowledge building: (1) video simulations, (2) contextualized resources, (3) concurrent feedback, (4) Reflective Exercises, and (5) commentaries prompting “reflection on reflection.” Conclusions Scaffolded design supports complex knowledge building. These findings are concurrent with educational research on the importance of recursion and revision of knowledge for improvable and relational understanding.


Pain Medicine | 2017

The Pain Interprofessional Curriculum Design Model

Judy Watt-Watson; Leila Lax; Robyn Davies; Sylvia Langlois; Jon Oskarsson; Lalitha Raman-Wilms

Objective Although the University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain has successfully implemented an Interfaculty Pain Curriculum since 2002, we have never formalized the process in a design model. Therefore, our primary aim was to develop a model that provided an overview of dynamic, interrelated elements that have been important in our experience. A secondary purpose was to use the model to frame an interactive workshop for attendees interested in developing their own pain curricula. Methods The faculties from Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Occupational Therapy, Pharmacy, and Physical Therapy met to develop the model components. Discussion focused on patient-centered pain assessment and management in an interprofessional context, with pain content being based on the International Association for the Study of Pain-Interprofessional Pain Curriculum domains and related core pain competencies. Profession-specific requirements were also considered, including regulatory/course requirements, level of students involved, type of course delivery, and pedagogic strategies. Results The resulting Pain Interprofessional Curriculum Design Model includes components that are dynamic, competency-based, collaborative, and interrelated. Key questions important to developing curricular components guide the process. The Model framed two design workshops with very positive responses from international and national attendees. Conclusions The Pain Interprofessional Curriculum Design Model is based on established pain curricula and related competencies that are relevant to all health science students at the prelicensure (entry-to-practice) level. The model has been developed from our experience, and the components resonated with workshop attendees from other regions. This Model provides a basis for future interventions in curriculum design and evaluation.


Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology | 2010

Beyond Learning Management Systems: Designing for Interprofessional Knowledge Building in the Health Sciences

Leila Lax; Marlene Scardamalia; Judy Watt-Watson; Judith P. Hunter; Carl Bereiter

This paper examines theoretical, pedagogical, and technological differences between two technologies that have been used in undergraduate interprofessional health sciences at the University of Toronto. One, a learning management system, WebCT 2.0, supports online coursework. The other, a Knowledge Building environment, Knowledge Forum 2.0, supports the collaborative work of knowledge-creating communities. Seventy students from six health science programs (Dentistry, Medicine, Nursing, Occupational Therapy, Pharmacy and Physical Therapy) participated online in a 5-day initiative to advance understanding of core principles and professional roles in pain assessment and management. Knowledge Forum functioned well as a learning management system but to preserve comparability between the two technologies its full resources were not brought into play. In this paper we examine three distinctive affordances of Knowledge Forum that have implications for health sciences education: (1) supports for Knowledge Building discourse as distinct from standard threaded discourse; (2) integration of sociocognitive functions as distinct from an assortment of separate tools; and (3) resources for multidimensional social and cognitive assessment that go beyond common participation indicators and instructor-designed quizzes and analyses. We argue that these design characteristics have the potential to open educational pathways that traditional learning management systems leave closed.


Pain Medicine | 2018

Evaluating an Innovative eLearning Pain Education Interprofessional Resource: A Pre–Post Study

Judy Watt-Watson; Michael McGillion; Leila Lax; Jon Oskarsson; Judith Hunter; Cameron MacLennan; Kerry Knickle; J. Charles Victor

Objective The challenges of moving the pain education agenda forward are significant worldwide, and resources, including online, are needed to help educators in curriculum development. Online resources are available but with insufficient evaluation in the context of prelicensure pain education. Therefore, this pre-post study examined the impact of an innovative eLearning model: the Pain Education Interprofessional Resource (PEIR) on usability, pain knowledge, beliefs, and understanding of pain assessment skills including empathy. Methods Participants were students (N = 96) recruited from seven prelicensure health sciences programs at the University of Toronto. They worked through three multifaceted modules, developed by an interprofessional team, that followed a patient with acute to persistent postsurgical pain up to one year. Module objectives, content, and assessment were based on International Association for the Study of Pain Pain Curricula domains and related pain core competencies. Multimedia interactive components focused on pain mechanisms and key pain care issues. Outcome measures included previously validated tools; data were analyzed in SPSS. Online exercises provided concurrent individual feedback throughout all modules. Results The completion rate for modules and online assessments was 100%. Overall usability scores (SD) were strong 4.27/5 (0.56). On average, pain knowledge scores increased 20% (P < 0.001). The Pain Assessment Skills Tool was sensitive to differences in student and expert pain assessment evaluation ratings and was useful as a tool to deliver formative feedback while engaged in interactive eLearning about pain assessment. Conclusions PEIR is an effective eLearning program with high student ratings for educational design and usability that significantly improved pain knowledge and understanding of collaborative care.


Canadian Journal of Pain | 2018

Mapping of pain curricula across health professions programs at the University of Toronto

Laura Murphy; Leila Lax; Renata Musa; Sylvia Langlois; Sharona Kanofsky; Judith P. Hunter; Dinesh Kumbhare; Sara Promislow; Jon Oskarsson; Robyn Davies; Lynn Cockburn; Maureen Barry; Aleksandra Bjelajac Mejia; Jose Lanca; Thuan Dao; Judy Watt-Watson; Bonnie Stevens

ABSTRACT Background: There is a growing societal need for health professional competency in pain care. The University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain–Interfaculty Pain Curriculum (UTCSP-IPC) has been offered since 2002. Content and process have been updated annually. In addition, participating health professions programs have advanced their pain teaching. A curricular scan was needed to creatively and constructively advance the UTCSP-IPC. Aim: The aim of this study was to map curricular pain content in participating health professions programs onto the UTCSP-IPC content as a first step to further curriculum design. Methods: UTCSP-IPC committee members and faculty representatives from six health profession programs completed a 27-item online survey in this collaborative action study. Descriptive statistics were completed in Microsoft Excel. Results: The UTCSP-IPC provided an average of 43.3% (range 32%–62%) of total pain content teaching hours to participating health professions students and a range of 8% to 100% of total opioid-related teaching hours. Curricular overlaps and gaps in pain content were identified and will be used to update and inform the iterative design of the UTCSP-IPC. Ninety-three percent of participating health professions faculty indicated that the interprofessional focus on pain care in the UTCSP-IPC was important. Conclusion: This study highlighted the value of the UTCSP and areas of curricular refinement to ensure continued relevance in relationship to pain content within the six participating health professions programs. Mapping a coordinated approach between uniprofessional and interprofessional teaching will both meet the demands of professional competence and create greater applicability to future practice settings.


Pain | 2004

An integrated undergraduate pain curriculum, based on IASP curricula, for six Health Science Faculties

Judy Watt-Watson; Judi Hunter; Peter S. Pennefather; Larry Librach; Lalitha Raman-Wilms; Martin Schreiber; Leila Lax; Jennifer Stinson; Thuan Dao; Allan Gordon; David Mock; Michael W. Salter


The Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning | 2011

Translating Face-to-Face Experiential Learning to Video for a Web-Based Communication Program

Laura Jayne Nelles; Cathy M. Smith; Leila Lax; Lynn Russell


Qwerty - Open and Interdisciplinary Journal of Technology, Culture and Education | 2010

7. Self-assessment for knowledge building in health care

Leila Lax; Anita Singh; Marlene Scardamalia; Larry Librach

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Michael McGillion

Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada

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Thuan Dao

University of Toronto

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Jon Oskarsson

University of California

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