"It's legal, now what?" development, implementation, and evaluation of interdisciplinary cannabis education for healthcare trainees.

IF 4.3 Q1 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Sean P Cronin, Josue Cruz, Elena Cameron, Sabrina Azemar, Steven Dudley, Tally M Largent-Milnes, Benjamin R Brady, Jessica S Wallace, Margie R Arnett, Stephen M Dahmer, Mohab M Ibrahim, Alyssa R Padilla, Todd W Vanderah, Jennifer S De La Rosa
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Abstract

Background: Healthcare professionals are motivated to improve their cannabis knowledge-yet few training opportunities exist. The unique legal status of cannabis, lack of rigorous research, and rapid expansion of consumer demand present challenges to the development and implementation of cannabis education for healthcare professionals and trainees. As a result, an alarming gap in quality of care is developing: health care professionals across disciplines lack the knowledge needed to counsel their patients, even as cannabis use rapidly accelerates.

Methods: We aimed to address the gap by developing and implementing an interprofessional cannabis training for healthcare trainees. Considering the challenges to development and implementation of cannabis training, we identified 4 implementation strategies to maximize training quality, uptake, and utility: 1) incorporating a diverse array of scientific expertise and perspectives in curriculum development; 2) offering a comprehensive, evidence-based treatment of potential risks and potential benefits; 3) using an interprofessional training format; 4) adopting a person-centered lens with special emphasis on patient-provider communication. A post-survey evaluated implementation success and intermediate outcomes in trainee attitudes and behavioral intentions that would suggest high potential to deliver healthcare improvements at scale.

Results: The virtual training "It's Legal, Now What? Cannabis Epidemiology, Treatment, and Safety Recommendations" was successfully implemented; since 2023 a total of 345 trainees in Pharmacy, Nursing, Public Health, and Medicine have earned certificates. Evaluation results are encouraging: 90% agree the training addressed a training need in their current role, 83% agree it should be required for trainees in their profession, 98% and 96% agree it comprehensively addressed potential risks and benefits, respectively, 94% agree it was inclusive of diverse perspectives, 94% agree it improved their knowledge of community resources, 96% report improved ability to respond to patients interested in cannabis, 96% report greater likelihood of providing information on cannabis to others, and 97% of trainees agree they learned information that would help them in their work or community.  CONCLUSIONS: We present our training development process, implementation strategy, and evaluation as an adaptable model for contexts where both recreational and medical use of cannabis are legal.

Abstract Image

“这是合法的,现在怎么办?”发展,实施和评估跨学科的大麻教育保健学员。
背景:医疗保健专业人员有动力提高他们的大麻知识,但很少有培训机会存在。大麻独特的法律地位、缺乏严谨的研究以及消费者需求的迅速扩大,对保健专业人员和受训人员开展和实施大麻教育提出了挑战。结果,在保健质量方面出现了令人震惊的差距:各学科的保健专业人员缺乏为病人提供咨询所需的知识,即使大麻的使用迅速增加。方法:我们的目标是通过制定和实施医疗保健学员大麻跨专业培训来解决这一差距。考虑到发展和实施大麻培训所面临的挑战,我们确定了4个实施策略,以最大限度地提高培训的质量,吸收和效用:1)在课程开发中纳入各种科学专业知识和观点;2)对潜在风险和潜在益处提供全面的循证治疗;3)采用跨专业的培训形式;4)以人为本,注重医患沟通。一项调查后评估了实施的成功和培训生态度和行为意图的中间结果,这表明大规模改善医疗保健的潜力很大。结果:虚拟培训“这是合法的,现在怎么办?”成功实施了《大麻流行病学、治疗和安全建议》;自2023年以来,共有345名药学、护理、公共卫生和医学学员获得证书。评价结果令人鼓舞:90%的人同意培训满足了他们当前角色的培训需求,83%的人同意培训应该要求他们的专业培训,98%和96%的人同意培训分别全面解决了潜在的风险和利益,94%的人同意培训包括了不同的观点,94%的人同意培训提高了他们对社区资源的了解,96%的人报告提高了对对大麻感兴趣的患者的反应能力,96%的人报告更有可能向他人提供有关大麻的信息。97%的受训者认为他们学到的信息对他们的工作或社区有帮助。结论:我们提出了我们的培训发展过程,实施战略和评估作为一个适应模式的背景下,娱乐和医疗使用大麻是合法的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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