Abstract
Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) have an important role in delivery of care in a tertiary children's hospital emergency department (ED). Most NPs and PAs have not had any formal training to work in a pediatric ED; although our NPs and PAs had no formal ED training, some were acute care certified. We describe a curriculum designed to improve knowledge and skills of NPs and PAs in the pediatric ED. The curriculum consists of three modules, namely, online lecture series, procedural workshops, and case scenarios in a simulated setting. Module 1 consisted of online lecture on 10 common ED diagnoses. The second module consisted of procedural workshops on lumbar puncture, incision and drainage of abscesses, gastrostomy insertion, and laceration repair. The third module included simulation scenarios on ED-specific cases of seizure in an infant, bronchiolitis and ruptured appendicitis with shock. Each module was evaluated by a survey. Participants rated each item on the survey using a Likert scale response (1 = disagree completely to 5 = agree completely ). Both NPs and PAs demonstrated increase in knowledge scores in posttest 1 vs pretest ( p < .001) and did not show a significant decline in posttest 2 ( p = .073). The mean ratings of components of the online lecture series, workshops, and simulation scenarios were 4.5-4.7, 4.4-4.8, and 4.5-4.7, respectively, with positive comments. This novel curriculum meets the educational needs of NPs and PAs at our institution and can be used as a model to train them at other tertiary care pediatric EDs.
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More From: Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners
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