Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#105 – The Impact of Precepting on Clinical Learning

What’s up yall! This is Jon Lowrance and this is episode 105 of Anesthesia Guidebook – the impact of precepting on clinical learning with Jennifer Heiden. This episode is coming out on February 21, 2024.

Jennifer Heiden is completing her Doctor of Nursing Practice in anesthesiology at the University of Arizona and this podcast is part of her doctoral work. In this episode, we’re going to walk through the behaviors, tips & techniques preceptors can do in order to positively impact the clinical learning outcomes of anesthesia residents. Jennifer wants to hear about your experiences either as an anesthesia trainee or as a clinical preceptor in the survey that is attached to this episode. The link is in the show notes. It’s a quick survey, totally anonymous and will be used to help Jennifer complete her doctoral project at the University of Arizona.

Survey Link is Here:

https://uarizona.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_88sSJwSor8yDoGy

Prior to anesthesia training, Jennifer worked in medical, surgical and cardiac ICUs for 8 years on the East and West coasts. Prior to nursing school, Jennifer completed a bachelor’s degree in finance from Boston University and lived in Colorado for almost twenty years hiking, running and climbing in the mountains. 

She currently lives in Temecula, California, and has been working through anesthesia school as a single mom to her 14-year-old son. She still enjoys climbing, running and spending time with her son and all their animals.

I hope you enjoy this show. The mission of Anesthesia Guidebook is to help you master your craft as a provider. The art & science of clinical precepting is foundational to raising the next generation of highly competent providers. I’m thrilled to take a fresh look at precepting with Jennifer and you can find lots of other shows on Anesthesia Guidebook that touch on clinical education with links to each of those in the show notes to this episode.

And if you’d like to get the show notes to these podcasts straight to your inbox, along with being the first to know when a new episode drops, subscribe to the show on the website. All that does is send you the episode & show notes, nothing more & no hidden agenda. It’s totally free and I will never sell or distribute your email. So if you want to be the first to know and have all the links right at your finger tips, subscribe to show at AnesthesiaGuidebook.com!

#8 – How to master precepting with Will C0hen

#21 – Best practices in precepting with Obinna Odumodo

#22 – The demo-do teaching technique

#55 – Incivility in the Workplace with Joshua Lea, DNP, MBA, CRNA & Kelly Gallant, PhD, CRNA

#74 – Thrive in Training: how to crush clinical

#75 – Thrive in Training: communicating with preceptors

Categories
Anesthesia Education Business/Finances

#35 – Asynchronous learning and the future of anesthesia education

This podcast follows up on the previous show which discussed free open access medical education (FOAM) and the use of social media in anesthesia education. Here, I discuss the power of asynchronous learning to shape the future of anesthesia education.

The power of asynchronous learning comes from the ability of content experts to produce something truly informative and engaging once and then make that widely available to learners over a prolonged span of time. 

The opportunity, the chance, the potential of asynchronous learning is to harness the best educators and minds to create engaging content to help raise the level of expertise of providers while reducing the upfront workload and cost of producing that content.  

Asynchronous learning challenges traditional paradigms of education. It brings up numerous questions for us to consider…

Why does every university need to have an expert in pharmacology on campus to deliver semester-long courses on anesthesia pharmacology year after year? 

Why do universities struggle to find and retain content experts when they could harness the power of asynchronous education to share a library of the best resources for cheaper tuition?

Why do universities, who charge astronomical tuition fees, then require their students to purchase third-party board preparation programs?  Shouldn’t the tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars in tuition be enough to get students successfully over the hurdle of boards?

Why are continuing education conferences so boring and expensive? 

Why do continuing education conferences rarely improve clinical skills or change practice? 

Why are thousands of grand rounds presentations given every year across the US and only a very select few individuals who happen to show up hear what leading experts are saying?

Why does it take on average 17 years for new evidence to find its way into widespread practice?

Why do we too often put profits ahead of advancing our field and improving access to patient care?

We have the opportunity to redesign the way we do education in the future.  Harnessing technology to maximize the benefit of asynchronous learning can reduce costs and likely make education more efficient and effective.

Some of you are today’s thought leaders and content creators.  Some of you will be the content creators, professors, educators and clinical experts of the future.  How will you step into those roles?  How will you harness the technology available to us to create more compelling, more interesting and effective learning tools?

These are the questions that will help us redefine what is possible in the way we train anesthesia providers and build better continuing education.

Categories
Anesthesia Education Business/Finances Preparing for Grad School/Residency

#34 – FOAM and social media in anesthesia education

Free open access medical education – or FOAM – is any medical educational content that’s shared freely on open access platforms, meaning the public can consume it without having to be a member of an organization or pay a subscription fee.  The reason it’s significant is that it brings evolving science & literature – and discussions around the art & science of medicine – into the hands of providers without the traditional paywalls that trade associations or peer-reviewed journals put up between you & their content in order to fund their work.  FOAM is all about the accessibility of information and given the rapid pace at which medical information evolves and podcasts, blogs & online journals can be updated, FOAM helps shape conversations around what’s happening right now in healthcare.  

It’s been said if you want to know the state of the literature 5-7 years ago, read the latest edition of any textbook.  If you want to know what was going on 2-3 years ago, read the print journal that just came to your mailbox.  And if you want to know what’s happening and changing right now, get on social media. 

In this episode, I discuss the history of FOAM and talk through the influence of social media in anesthesia education. We take a look at the incentives that shape the behavior of content producers in the social media world and look at ways of harnessing FOAM and social media platforms to leverage these tools for the greatest impact.

Resources:

Andrejco, K. (2017). Social Media in Nurse Anesthesia: A Model of a Reproducible Educational Podcast. AANA journal, 85(1).  Retrieved from https://www.aana.com/docs/default-source/aana-journal-web-documents-1/social-media-0217-pp10-16.pdf?sfvrsn=89cd48b1_6 

Chan, T. M., Stehman, C., Gottlieb, M., & Thoma, B. (2020). A short history of free open access medical education. the past, present, and future. ATS scholar, 1(2), 87-100. https://www.atsjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.34197/ats-scholar.2020-0014PS 

Categories
Anesthesia Education Clinical Tips Preparing for Grad School/Residency Wellness

#8 – How to master precepting with Will Cohen, MSN, CRNA

Today I’m joined by Will Cohen to talk about clinical precepting.  We discuss ways to create effective learning environments, how to expect excellence while being supportive and other tips for mastering the art of precepting.

Will created the Facebook page CRNA Preceptors and has become well known in the CRNA world for creating masterfully crafted deep dives on physiology & pharmacology to help CRNA preceptors train their resident SRNAs  

William Cohen is a CRNA who currently practices at two hospitals in the Kansas City metro area.  The first is the University of Kansas Health System which serves as the regional level 1 trauma & burn center.  The other is the Minimally Invasive Surgical Hospital, which focuses on bariatric and orthopedic surgeries and is staffed by a CRNA-only team proficient in multimodal, opioid sparing and ultrasound guided regional anesthesia techniques. 

Mr. Cohen graduated from the Our Lady of Lourdes Nurse Anesthesia Program with a Master’s degree, and had been in various clinical roles prior to entering the anesthesia environment.  He has provided patient care in the pre-hospital setting as an EMT and Paramedic in Ohio and New Jersey, as well as working as a trauma critical care nurse in Atlantic City. Throughout each phase of his career, William has always taken on preceptor roles and enjoys having learners in the clinical environment. 

William has a wide array of interests in healthcare, including precepting learners, human behavior during crisis and emergencies, airway management, opioid sparing anesthesia, and process improvement. Saving the best for last, William thrives on being a husband and father. His family loves to travel, as well as go mountain biking, skiing and experiencing whatever local foods and beers happen to be found along the way.

Chipas, A., Cordrey, D., Floyd, D., Grubbs, L., Miller, S., & Tyre, B. (2012). Stress: perceptions, manifestations, and coping mechanisms of student registered nurse anesthetists. AANA Journal80(4).