Embedding spirituality and compassion into clinical education: A pilot study of Spotlight sessions in Advanced Clinical Practice

The need for spiritually sensitive and compassionate health care is recognised by health-regulatory bodies, yet, they are often not taught in health professional education. Guidelines identify expected competencies, but the best teaching techniques to develop these competencies, are unknown. Spotlig...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Gulliksen, Elisabeth (Author) ; Rogers, Melanie (Author) ; Wattis, John P. 1949- (Author) ; Stephenson, John (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 2024
In: Journal for the Study of Spirituality
Year: 2024, Volume: 14, Issue: 1, Pages: 32–43
Further subjects:B Spirituality
B Health professional education
B Compassion
B Advanced clinical practice
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Description
Summary:The need for spiritually sensitive and compassionate health care is recognised by health-regulatory bodies, yet, they are often not taught in health professional education. Guidelines identify expected competencies, but the best teaching techniques to develop these competencies, are unknown. Spotlights are a novel teaching method designed to integrate compassion and spirituality into existing academic curricula. Spotlights entail a moment in taught sessions, where the clinical knowledge that is being delivered, is used to scaffold discussions surrounding compassion and spirituality. A pilot project explored Spotlight’s ability to integrate compassion and spirituality into health professional education. Trainee Advanced Clinical Practitioners received between 23 and 46 Spotlights over an academic year. The effectiveness was assessed by an anonymous survey pre- and post-intervention. Mean post-intervention scores were largely unchanged from corresponding pre-intervention scores. High levels of compassion and positive perceptions of spirituality were found before the intervention. The study was not powered to assess efficacy and significance testing was not conducted. Surprising outcomes saw students autonomously incorporating Spotlights into their work and increased discussions surrounding spirituality. Thus suggesting these concepts were becoming embedded into the culture of the trainees. Spotlights were an implementable method, well received by students and educators alike. HighlightsCompassionate and spiritually sensitive care is expected of health professionals.Teaching methods to develop these competencies are being explored.Spotlights are a novel teaching method to integrate compassion and spirituality into clinical education. Compassionate and spiritually sensitive care is expected of health professionals. Teaching methods to develop these competencies are being explored. Spotlights are a novel teaching method to integrate compassion and spirituality into clinical education.
ISSN:2044-0251
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal for the Study of Spirituality
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1080/20440243.2023.2276695