Medical Education Clinical Trial
Official title:
Transfusion Camp for Medical Students in Rwanda: a Multidisciplinary Initiative Teaching Graduating Medical Students How to Utilize Blood Products and Derivatives Safely in District Hospitals
Transfusion medicine is closely linked with safe surgery. Transfusion Camp is a multidisciplinary educational project aimed at improving transfusion medicine knowledge in physicians. The course has been piloted in Rwanda, showing improvement in participant knowledge and confidence, resulting in its recommended implementation into the medical school curriculum. This project aims to evaluate a multi-day Transfusion Camp course mandatory for graduating medical students and first-year interns practicing in district hospitals in Rwanda. Its implementation is evaluated through pre- and post-course testing, collecting participants' blood ordering practices following the course, and conducting participant interviews about barriers to safe transfusion medicine in their hospital.
Purpose: to assess efficacy of the recommendation set out through the University of Rwanda faculty working group discussions and the Canada-Rwanda Transfusion Camp partnership to implement a mandatory, annual multi-day Transfusion Camp course for final year medical students preparing to enter internship training and dispersing across the majority of district hospitals in Rwanda. Hypothesis: (1) Graduating medical students and new interns will have a statistically significant improvement in their test scores after a 3-day Transfusion Camp Rwanda course. (2) There will be a statistically significant positive change in blood product ordering practices among course participants when compared with interns who have not participated in Transfusion Camp Rwanda. (3) In conducting semi-structured interviews of participants who took part in Transfusion Camp Rwanda the investigators will identify key enablers and barriers that are faced by participants in patient blood management that will give insight on strategies for future research and interventions. Population: Final year graduating University of Rwanda medical students about to enter their internship year at district hospitals in Rwanda and new interns currently in the first year of their internship at district hospitals in Rwanda. Research method: 1. Knowledge assessment and course evaluation: A validated pre-test assessment used currently in Transfusion Camp Rwanda will be administered prior to and after the session is complete. This test is a regular component of all Transfusion Camp courses in Canada, the United Kingdom, and Rwanda and separate from the research component of this project. It is a portion of the standard Transfusion Camp curriculum.This assessment is a combination of knowledge-based multiple-choice questions, questions on confidence in carrying out transfusion medicine decision-making in patient care, and a brief course evaluation to inform future courses. After 3 months, a second post-test assessment will be administered in the same manner as the pre- and post-test to assess knowledge retention. This test also asks the question about whether or not participants have applied their new knowledge in clinical practice, which will give some insight into the applicability of the course work in Transfusion Camp to real-life transfusion problems in clinical practice in Rwanda. 2. Blood product ordering practices: blood ordering practices of intern physicians will be collected using the blood product order form currently in use at all laboratories and health centres in Rwanda for the ordering of blood products. Control data will be collected at district hospitals prior to Transfusion Camp: ordering practices of intern physicians at district hospitals who did not participate in Transfusion Camp and, where possible, the hospital does not have faculty who have previously participated in Transfusion Camp. Three months following Transfusion Camp, the blood ordering practices of Transfusion Camp participants will be collected over a three-month period. 3. Semi-structured interviews: Participants who indicated interest during Transfusion Camp will be contacted to consent to an interview three months post-Transfusion Camp to allow opportunity and time for the participants to apply what has been learned. The interviews aim to gain insight into contextual factors, including hospital culture, hierarchy, product availability, resources for continuing professional development, and anything else that may act as barriers to them being able to follow the Rwanda transfusion guidelines taught and reinforced in Transfusion Camp Rwanda. Interviews will preferably take place face-to-face with two interviewers, a Canadian faculty well experienced in the Transfusion Camp curriculum and one Rwandan faculty member who is also experienced in the curriculum but aware of the cultural context and able to communicate in Kinyarwanda as required. ;
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