Reimagining When, Where, and How to Teach Palliative and End-of-Life Care
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM (ET)
Webinar Details
This interactive faculty webinar will advance and expand the definition and application of palliative care principles across teaching modalities. Palliative care concepts apply across the lifespan as well as across practice settings. Hear from two faculty leading a national initiative to support schools of nursing in advancing palliative care nursing education.
Objectives:
- 1. Differentiate hospice and palliative care concepts as they apply across an illness trajectory.
- 2. Expand understanding of the many opportunities to integrate palliative care concepts across multiple care settings.
- 3. Gain knowledge of available resources to assist faculty in teaching palliative care concepts.
Note: Recording of the webinar will be available soon after the webinar airs. Visit AACN's On-Demand Webinars to watch.
Speakers
Speakers
Andra Davis, PhD, MN, RN
Associate Professor
University of Portland
School of Nursing and Health Innovation
Dr. Andra Davis (she/her) is an Associate Professor with palliative care expertise (educational and instrument development). She is a co-investigator with the End-of-life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) and leads a national effort to advance palliative care education in schools of nursing. With her colleague Dr. Lippe, she has developed instruments to evaluate student learning related to palliative care education. In addition to this work, she has participated in revision of national palliative care competency statements intended for use in schools of nursing. Dr. Davis has worked with an international team of researchers to explore provider experiences in caring for persons at the end of life in Thailand. Other work includes nurse-led symptom support for persons receiving cancer treatment and development of national family caregiver competencies within a national consortium of nurse educators.
Megan Lippe, PhD, MSN, RN, ANEF, FAAN
Associate Professor
University of Texas Health San Antonio
School of Nursing
Dr. Megan Lippe is an Associate Professor with tenure and a palliative care expert. She is a national leader for palliative nursing care education with published works in areas related to palliative care education, simulation, interprofessional education, and social justice. She is a co-investigator of the End of Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) focused on advancing palliative care education in schools of nursing throughout the country. Dr. Lippe is the lead author for AACN-endorsed national palliative care competence statement revisions for undergraduate an d graduate education (CARES and G-CARES, respectively) and the ELNEC Undergraduate/New Graduate curriculum.
Tags
The ART and Science of Feedback in Clinical Education
1:00 PM - 2:00 PM (ET)
Webinar Details
Feedback is a fundamental tool of effective teaching and a skill that, though easily learned, takes a lifetime to master. How we interact with each other when we participate in feedback conversations can greatly influence the quality of our relationships and our work, and is critical to our success as team members, clinicians, and educators. This webinar, led by medical educators Dr. Calvin Chou and Kara Myers, introduces an evidence-based model for feedback that emphasizes a relationship-centered, dynamic, bidirectional conversation in the context of a psychologically-safe learning and working environment.
Objectives:
- Define “feedback” in clinical education
- Assimilate literature on feedback into an approach to hosting feedback conversations
- Describe a method of nonjudgmental delivery of feedback
Speakers
Speakers
Calvin Chou, MD, PhD
Professor of Medicine
University of California at San Francisco
Calvin Chou is Professor of Medicine at the University of California at San Francisco, and staff physician at the Veterans Affairs Health Care System in San Francisco. As Senior Faculty Advisor for External Education with the Academy of Communication in Healthcare (ACH), he is recognized internationally for leading workshops in relationship-centered communication, feedback, conflict, and remediation in health professions education. He is co-editor of the books Remediation in Medical Education: A Midcourse Correction, and Communication Rx: Transforming Healthcare Through Relationship-Centered Communication.
Clinical Professor
University of California San Francisco
Kara Myers has been practicing nurse-midwifery since 2000, when she completed graduate training at UCSF. She is currently Clinical Professor in the UCSF Department of OB, Gyn, and Reproductive Sciences. Her clinical practice sites are Zuckerberg San Francisco General (ZSFG) and Mission Neighborhood Health Center. Additionally, she is a member of the leadership council for the nurse-midwifery faculty practice at ZSFG and serves as a Senior Faculty Advisor for the Academy of Communication in Healthcare (ACH).
Kara co-directs the Relationship Centered Communication program at ZSFG and was a founding co-director of the Relationship Centered Communication Facilitators program for ACH. Within the UCSF community and nationally, as faculty of ACH, she regularly facilitates workshops in relationship centered communication, conflict, and feedback. In collaboration with colleagues, she has designed and implemented workshops focusing on the application of relationship centered communication to the promotion of equity in health care and health professions education.