AI Article Synopsis

  • The University of Toronto's pain curriculum (UTCSP-IPC) has been offered since 2002, evolving to meet the growing need for health professional competency in pain management, requiring a review to enhance its content.
  • A study aimed to align the pain education provided by six health programs with UTCSP-IPC's structure, revealing that UTCSP-IPC constitutes about 43.3% of total pain education hours while highlighting overlaps and gaps in the current curriculum.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of an interprofessional approach to pain care education, suggesting further curriculum improvements to ensure relevancy and better preparation for future healthcare settings.

Article Abstract

Background: There is a growing societal need for health professional competency in pain care. The University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain-Interfaculty Pain Curriculum (UTCSP-IPC) has been offered since 2002. Content and process have been updated annually. In addition, participating health professions programs have advanced their pain teaching. A curricular scan was needed to creatively and constructively advance the UTCSP-IPC.

Aim: The aim of this study was to map curricular pain content in participating health professions programs onto the UTCSP-IPC content as a first step to further curriculum design.

Methods: UTCSP-IPC committee members and faculty representatives from six health profession programs completed a 27-item online survey in this collaborative action study. Descriptive statistics were completed in Microsoft Excel.

Results: The UTCSP-IPC provided an average of 43.3% (range 32%-62%) of total pain content teaching hours to participating health professions students and a range of 8% to 100% of total opioid-related teaching hours. Curricular overlaps and gaps in pain content were identified and will be used to update and inform the iterative design of the UTCSP-IPC. Ninety-three percent of participating health professions faculty indicated that the interprofessional focus on pain care in the UTCSP-IPC was important.

Conclusion: This study highlighted the value of the UTCSP and areas of curricular refinement to ensure continued relevance in relationship to pain content within the six participating health professions programs. Mapping a coordinated approach between uniprofessional and interprofessional teaching will both meet the demands of professional competence and create greater applicability to future practice settings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8730574PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/24740527.2018.1479841DOI Listing

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