Title: The CAM Research Education Partnership Project
1The CAM Research Education Partnership Project
- Bridging Research
- and
- Clinical Practice
2Outline
- NIH NCCAM Education Grant Program
- Dr. Kreitzer
- NWHSU CAM Research Education Partnership Project
- Dr. Evans
- Importance of CAM Research Education Project to
NWHSU - Dr. Devries
- BREAK
- Implementation of CAM Research Education Project
3NIH NCCAM Education Grant ProgramFocus and
Lessons Learned
- Mary Jo Kreitzer PhD, RN, FAAN
- Director and Professor
- Center for Spirituality and Healing
- University of Minnesota
4NIH CAM Education Grants History and Lessons
Learned
- Goal Incorporate CAM information into the
curriculum of health professional schools. - 15 grants were awarded to medical and nursing
schools and to the American Student Medical
Association between 2000-2007. Most of the
grants were awarded for 5 years.
5General Strategy
- Identify competencies.
- Develop curricula didactic, experiential, and
on-line - Integrate content into required curricula.
- Evaluate student achievement.
6Opportunity to Collaborate with CAM Institutions
- University of Minnesota/NWHSU
- Tufts/New England School of Acupuncture
- University of WA/Bastyr University
- Oregon Health and Sciences University/Western
States Chiropractic, Oregon College of Oriental
Medicine, and National College of Natural
Medicine.
7University of Minnesota
- Focus Medicine, Nursing and Pharmacy
- Graduate and undergraduate education
- Didactic, on-line and experiential learning
- Discipline specific and interdisciplinary
8On-line Learning
- 35 hours of on-line education
- Curricular Resources
- Used as required and supplemental material
- Faculty development
9Open Access
10Collaboration with NWHSU
- Medical Students
- TCM
- Manual Healing
11Collaboration with NWHSU
- On-line Modules
- TCM Chris Hafner
- Massage Beth Burgan and Dale Healey
- Chiropractic Larry Kuusisto
12Collaborative Efforts with NWHSU Continue to
Expand
- NIH funded clinical research fellowship program
- Pillsbury Integrated Health Clinic
- Current NIH Education Grant CAM Research
Education Partnership
13Lessons Learned from R25 Grants
- Integration of content needs to be throughout the
curriculum and not limited to a particular
course. - Faculty Development is key. Faculty need access
to reliable and effective resources. - Leadership at all levels student, faculty and
administration.
14Lessons Learned from R25 Grants
- Most visible and impactful outcome
- Culture Change
15NCCAM CAM Practitioner Research Education Project
Grant Partnership
- Established in 2004 to increase the research
content in CAM practitioner training in
accredited schools that offer doctoral degrees in
a CAM practice. - Required partnership with a research intensive
university.
161st Round of Grant Awards
- Western States Chiropractic College
- Oregon College of Oriental Medicine
- Bastyr University
- AT Still University of Health Sciences
- National University of Health Sciences
17NWHSU 2nd Group of Grants Awarded !!
18National University of Health Sciences
- Chiropractic, Naturopathic and Oriental Medicine
students - Curriculum spans 5 trimesters
- Faculty Development workshops, lunch-n-learn
lectures, on-line journal club and Best of a
Topic web pages. - Student mentored research and faculty mentored
research sabbatical program
19Western States Chiropractic
- Curriculum is woven into multiple courses that
span the entire 4 years of training. - Variety of teaching methods didactic, small
group, on-line. - Clinic-based strategy patient-based clinical
questions. - Faculty Development 20 hour EBP course and
module on information literacy.
20Oregon College of Oriental Medicine
- Focus building a research culture at OCOM.
- Required course Experience and Evidence in
Oriental Medicine, two additional research
courses, and content woven into additional
courses. - Faculty Development Research Scholars Program
receive research training and mentoring support
as they develop research related learning
activities for the courses they teach.
21Bastyr University
- Faculty Development Program
- Bastyr Faculty completing a basic clinical
research certificate program at Univ. of WA
School of Public Health. - ND faculty shadow FP faculty to observe how EBM
is taught. - FP faculty shadow ND faculty and assist in
teaching EBM.
22AT Still University
- Faculty Development Program
- Workshops for basic science and clinical faculty
(who view EBM very differently). - Partner institution Penn State-Hershey.
23Lessons Learned
- Focus culture change in their institutions and
professions. - Faculty development is the most important
component of their grant effort.
24NWHSUs CAM Research Education Partnership
Project
- Dr. Roni Evans
- Wolfe-Harris Center for Clinical Studies,
- Northwestern Health Sciences University
25Background Timeline
Winter
NCCAM call for proposals
Project Implementation
Spring
NCCAM Review
Proposal Preparation
NCCAM Review
NWHSU Upper Admin
Stakeholder Surveys
Faculty Surveys
Summer
Not Approved
Funding Approved
NWHSU Cabinet
DC Curriculum Committee
Revision
Fall
Project Start Up
Proposal Submitted
Proposal Re-submitted
26Project Overview
- 4 years
- Funded by the National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) - 800,000
- Long Term Objective
- To facilitate Evidence Informed Practice among
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)
practitioners
27Evidence Informed Practice (EIP)
28The Evidence House
Health Services Research
Systematic Reviews
Randomized Controlled Trials
Epidemiology, Observational Research
Laboratory (Physiologic Studies)
Qualitative Studies Case Reports
Jonas WB. The evidence house how to build an
inclusive base for complementary medicine. West
J Med 200117579-80
29Evidence Informed Practice Skills
Clinical Presentation
Skills History, Examination, Clinical
Interpretation
Clinical Expertise
Patient Preferences
Research Evidence
Skills Communication, assessment tools
Skills Efficiently, find, evaluate, Interpret,
apply and communicate
30Project Goals
- To provide students, faculty and practitioners
with the resources necessary to efficiently and
effectively achieve evidence informed practice
(EIP). - Establish an EIP focused student research
curriculum - Establish an EIP focused faculty development
program - Establish an EIP focused post-graduate program
- Offer EIP practical experiences
- Employ systematic evaluation
- .for chiropractic, acupuncture/TCM, and
massage
31Approach
- Collaborative effort research, 3 academic
programs, U of M - Each goal addressed by a team responsible to the
Project Core Team and Advisory Committee - Focus on learning strategies that are clinically
relevant, learner centered, interactive and
promote faculty mentorship - ADDIE instructional development model1
Analysis, Design, Development, Implementation and
Evaluation - Emphasis on research as a resource, one piece
of the clinical puzzle - Providing students, faculty and practitioners
with the resources needed to use research
1 Dick W, Carey L, Carey J. The Systematic Design
of Instruction. 6th ed. Boston, MA Allyn and
Bacon, 2005.
32Staged Implementation
Introduce EIP to Field Practitioners
Integrate EIP In Clinical Settings
- Analyze needs, competency requirements, map
curricula - Design, develop Foundational EIP Courses for each
program - Train faculty
- Implement Foundational EIP Courses
- Identify other courses for EIP integration
- Evaluate new courses, project progress
- Analyze needs
- Design, develop, implement post-graduate courses
- Provide resources to field practitoners
- Provide practical training experiences
- Evaluate
Integrate EIP Throughout Curricula
- Analyze needs, interests
- Design, develop, implement instructional units
for clinic courses - Provide mentorship, resources to clinic faculty
- Provide practical training experiences
- Evaluate
Build EIP Foundation
- Analyze needs and interests
- Design, develop, implement instructional units
for other courses - Implement training and mentorship for
non-research faculty - Evaluate
33Why is the CAM Research Education Partnership
Project Important to NWHSU?
- Dr. Renee Devries
- Northwestern Health Sciences University
34Invitation to Participate in Data Collection for
Educational Purposes
- You are invited to participate in a group survey
regarding common evidence-informed practice (EIP)
related competencies. This information will be
used to develop the student research curriculum
at NWHSU. - Data will be made available to the CAM Project
investigators in summary fashion only and you
will not be able to be identified based on your
responses. Your participation is voluntary your
decision will not affect your current or future
relations with NWHSU. - If you have questions or concerns, please contact
Dr. Roni Evans at revans_at_nwhealth.edu. - By choosing to participate in this data
collection activity, you are acknowledging
consent to the above conditions.
35Implementation of the CAM Research Education
Partnership Project
Dr. Roni Evans Wolfe-Harris Center for Clinical
Studies, Northwestern Health Sciences University
36Project Implementation
- Current Focus
- Organizational Structure
- Next Steps
- Timelines
- Faculty Involvement
37Current Focus
- Establish a EIP focused student research
curriculum - Establish a EIP focused faculty development
program - Establish a EIP focused post-graduate program
- Offer EIP practical experiences
- Employ systematic evaluation
38Organizational Structure
Advisory Committee
Core Team
Team 1 Student Curriculum
Team 2 Faculty Development
Team 3 Post- Graduate
Team 4 Research Experiences
Team 5 Evaluation
39Core Team
- Roni Evans, Principal Investigator, NWHSU
- Mary Jo Kreitzer, Principal Investigator, U of M
- Lori Baldwin, Project Coordintaor
- Louise Delagran, Education Specialist, U of M
- Michele Maiers, Co-Investigator, NWHSU
40Advisory Committee
- Julia Bartlett, Assoc Dean, Chir
- Roni Evans, Dean of Research
- Dale Healey, Dean, Massage
- Mary Jo Kreitzer, U of M
- Mark McKenzie, Dean, MCAOM
- Chuck Sawyer, Provost
- Noni Threinen, Assoc VP Inst Effect
- Consultants
- Gert Bronfort, NWHSU
- Mitch Haas, Western States
- Allen Shaughnessy, Tufts
- David Slawson, U of V
41Team 1 Student Research Curriculum
EIP Foundational Course Instructors
- Michele Maiers
- Co-chair
- Louise Delagran
- Co-chair
- Educational Specialist
- Julia Bartlett, Assoc Dean, Chiropractic
- Renee Devries, DC, DACBR
- Faculty Development Team Representative
- Michele Maiers, DC, MPH
- Lead Instructor
- Research
- Lori Baldwin, MoM, Lic Acc
- ACC/TCM
- Barry Taylor
- Chiropractic
- Kristine Westrom, MD
- Research/Medicine
- TBN
- (Massage)
TBN Faculty Consultants
42Application of ADDIE ModelGoal 1 Student
Curriculum
- DESIGN
- Draft broad EIP competencies
- Map broad EIP competencies to institutional and
accreditation competencies and learning
objectives - Submit to Advisory Committee for approval
- Revise EIP competencies as necessary
- DEVELOP
- From broad competencies, define learning
objectives for the EIP student research
curriculum - Identify Foundational EIP Course learning
objectives modify as necessary for each academic
program - Match learning objectives to instructional
strategy and delivery methods customize for each
academic program - Estimate credit hours, including on-line
- Submit plan to Advisory Committee for approvals
- Revise as necessary
- Develop Foundational EIP Courses
- Create curriculum blueprints for each program to
identify appropriate courses for EIP integration,
work with Team 2 (faculty development) to seek
interested faculty
- ANALYZE
- Assess stakeholders perspectives
- Importance, skill level
- Program goals
- Barriers
- Perspectives What does the EIP CAM provider
look like? - Review research-related competencies and
learning objectives - Current NWHSU, program and institution wide
- Other institutions
- Accreditation requirements
- IMPLEMENT
- Provide training in how to teach EIP to
Foundational EIP course faculty - Coordinate timing, course load of EIP
Foundational courses with academic programs - Pilot test new on-line strategies
- Implement Foundational EIP courses in each
academic program
- EVALUATE
- Identify/develop evaluation tools to assess
learners - knowledge
- skills,
- behaviors, and attitudes
- Tools may include survey questionnaires, testing
instruments, qualitative interviews, focus
groups, observed structured clinical evaluations
(OSCEs), etc.
Analyze
Evaluate
Design
Develop
Implement
- SIMILAR APPLICATION OF ADDIE
- MODEL FOR REMAINING GOALS
- Faculty development
- Post-graduate
- Research experiences
43Looking Ahead
Winter
Teams 1, 2 5 begin work
Team 3 begins work
Implement Post-graduate EIP Courses
Team 4 begins work
Integrate EIP into Other Courses
Faculty Surveys
Focus Groups
Spring
Implement Foundational EIP Courses
Training Foundational Faculty
Integrate EIP into Clinical Courses
Faculty EIP Courses, Mentorship
Summer
Fall
All Faculty Workshop
All Faculty Workshop?
2008
2009
2010
2011
Key Team 1Student Curriculum Team 2Faculty
Development Team 3Post-Graduate Team 4Research
Experiences Team 5Evaluation
44Faculty Involvement
- Pre-funding survey of perceived value and own
skill level - Post-funding surveys (value, skill level,
organizational change) - Focus groups
- Team Members
- Team Consultants
- EIP Integrators
45We look forward to working with you!