Improving medication practices for persons with intellectual and developmental disability: Educating direct support staff using simulation, debriefing, and reflection

Direct support professionals (DSPs) are increasingly active in medication administration for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, thus supplementing nursing and family caretakers. Providing workplace training for DSPs is often the duty of nursing personnel. This article presents...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of intellectual disabilities 2019-12, Vol.23 (4), p.498-511
Hauptverfasser: Auberry, Kathy, Wills, Katherine, Shaver, Carrie
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container_title Journal of intellectual disabilities
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creator Auberry, Kathy
Wills, Katherine
Shaver, Carrie
description Direct support professionals (DSPs) are increasingly active in medication administration for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, thus supplementing nursing and family caretakers. Providing workplace training for DSPs is often the duty of nursing personnel. This article presents empirical data and design suggestions for including simulations, debriefing, and written reflective practice during in-service training for DSPs in order to improve DSPs’ skills and confidence related to medication administration. Quantitative study results demonstrate that DSPs acknowledge that their skill level and confidence rose significantly after hands-on simulations. The skill-level effect was statistically significant for general medication management −4.5 (p < 0.001) and gastrointestinal medication management −4.4 (p < 0.001). Qualitative findings show a deep desire by DSPs to not just be “pill poppers” but to understand the medical processes, causalities, and consequences of their medication administration. On the basis of our results, the authors make recommendations regarding how to combine DSP workplace simulations and debriefing with written reflective practice in DSP continuing education.
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subjects Adult
Allied Health Personnel
Allied Health Personnel - education
Caregivers
Clinical Experience
Continuing education
Debriefing
Developmental Disabilities
Developmental Disabilities - drug therapy
Drug administration
Drug Therapy
Drugs
Experiential Learning
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
Inservice training
Inservice Training - methods
Intellectual disabilities
Intellectual Disability
Intellectual Disability - drug therapy
Learning disabled people
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing care
Qualitative Research
Reflection
Reflective practice
Self Efficacy
Simulation
Skill Development
Training
Workplace Learning
Workplaces
title Improving medication practices for persons with intellectual and developmental disability: Educating direct support staff using simulation, debriefing, and reflection
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