“I teach it because it is the biggest threat to health”: Integrating sustainable healthcare into health professions education
2020; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 43; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1080/0142159x.2020.1844876
ISSN1466-187X
AutoresGabrielle Brand, Jorja Collins, Gitanjali Bedi, James Bonnamy, Liza Barbour, Chanika Ilangakoon, Rosie Wotherspoon, Margaret Simmons, Misol Kim, Patricia Nayna Schwerdtle,
Tópico(s)Public Health Policies and Education
ResumoBackground Steering planetary and human health towards a more sustainable future demands educated and prepared health professionals.Aim This research aimed: to explore health professions educators' sustainable healthcare education (SHE) knowledge, attitudes, self-efficacy and teaching practices across 13 health professions courses in one Australian university.Methods Utilising a sequential mixed-methods design: Phase one (understanding) involved an online survey to ascertain educators' SHE knowledge, attitudes, self-efficacy and teaching practices to inform phase two (solution generation), 'Teach Green' Hackathon. Survey data was descriptively analysed and a gap analysis performed to promote generation of solutions during phase two. Results from the hackathon were thematically analysed to produce five recommendations.Results Regarding SHE, survey data across 13 health professions disciplines (n = 163) identified strong content knowledge (90.8%); however, only (36.9%) reported confidence to 'explain' and (44.2%) to 'inspire' students. Two thirds of participants (67.5%) reported not knowing how best to teach SHE. Hackathon data revealed three main influencing factors: regulatory, policy and socio-cultural drivers.Conclusions The five actionable recommendations to strengthen interdisciplinary capacity to integrate SHE include: inspire multi-level leadership and collaboration; privilege student voice; develop a SHE curriculum and resources repository; and integrate SHE into course accreditation standards.
Referência(s)