Abstract

Telehealth offers a healthcare solution when functional, social, or geographic barriers arise; however, many clinical education curricula are ill-equipped to prepare learners for effective, multidisciplinary telehealth consultations. The COVID-19 pandemic drastically expanded reliance on telehealth in clinical practice and highlighted the urgent need to educate students across health professions in telehealth delivery. To address this educational gap, student and faculty collaborators from Duke University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill utilized a developmental evaluation approach to rapidly design and pilot a compact, five-session, virtual curriculum to train students from a broad range of health professions in telehealth delivery. Through focused readings, large group didactics, and small group discussion, the curriculum provided a general overview of telehealth, addressed specific issues in health equity and access in virtual care both locally and nationally, introduced skills for conducting telehealth visits, and employed a patient simulation for students to practice their newly learned skills. The curriculum was delivered virtually over eight weeks to 36 students from ten health professions programs (occupational therapy, social work, pharmacy, audiology, speech-language pathology, dentistry, medicine, nursing, physical therapy, and physician assistants) across two universities. End-of-course feedback surveys identified that students most valued the opportunity to work with learners from different professions, practical instruction for telehealth, and a standardized patient experience. On post-course surveys students reported high self-efficacy in their telehealth competencies and indicated very positive attitudes toward interprofessional education. Overall, the compact nature of this curriculum facilitates adaptability to other student-led groups.

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