Child Maltreatment Education: Utilizing an Escape Room Activity to Engage Learners on a Sensitive Topic.

Shelley Brukman, Makenzie J Ferguson, Kimberly D Zaky, Chloe Knudsen-Robbins, Theodore W Heyming
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Audience: Emergency medical service (EMS) providers and other health care professionals.

Introduction: In 2019 alone, 656,000 children in the United States were victims of child abuse and neglect.1 The medical community has historically struggled with the identification of child maltreatment. In one study, 33% of abused children had a previous visit with a medical provider in which the abuse was found to have been missed.2 Many voices in the healthcare community have advocated for the implementation of routine screening, and studies have demonstrated the implementation of such screening in the emergency department (ED) increases the detection of child maltreatment.3-7 Child maltreatment screening tools are increasingly utilized in primary care and ED settings, but one has yet to be adapted or designed for universal use by emergency medical services (EMS) professionals in the prehospital care context. Because EMS providers are uniquely positioned to assess for maltreatment, they have traditionally been the only provider to interact with families in the home environment. Unfortunately, EMS rates of documentation of maltreatment is quite low. A recent study using the National Emergency Medical Services Information System database to evaluate EMS documentation of child maltreatment in patients ≤3 years of age compared to the national incidence of known maltreatment found an almost 15-fold discrepancy.8 There have been several attempts to elucidate the difficulties of and barriers to reporting by EMS providers. Markenson et al and Tiyyagura et al outlined several areas that potentially contribute to a lack of reporting: minimal continuing medical education (CME) on child maltreatment, knowledge of physical and historical details suspicious for abuse, knowledge of child development, limited clinical evaluation time in a fast-paced work environment, understanding of how to appropriately interact with families, and fear of being wrong.9,10 This class/escape room activity was developed to directly address several of these areas. Emergency medical service providers participate in traditional didactics (in the form of a short lecture), followed by an escape room activity in which they further explore and reinforce learning in a fun and memorable environment. This activity also promotes teamwork, an especially important skill in potentially complex and difficult situations such as those surrounding suspected child maltreatment.

Educational objectives: By the end of the escape room, the learner should be able to: 1) understand the national and local prevalence of child maltreatment; 2) understand the different types of child maltreatment and common associated presentations; 3) know the local EMS agency reporting requirements; 4) understand when to make base hospital contact with respect to concern for maltreatment; 5) collaborate effectively as a team.

Educational methods: Child maltreatment can be a sensitive and challenging topic. In this class, we presented learners with a short, 15-minute lecture (see Pre-Escape Room Lecture PowerPoint) followed by an escape room activity. The Pre-Escape Room Lecture PowerPoint includes suggestions on the type of image and/or statistics to include on each slide, which can be taken from your site's available de-identified photos and information. The lecture included material describing national and local statistics on child maltreatment, definitions of abuse, and techniques to help identify concern for maltreatment. Learners were free to ask questions following lecture. They were then divided into their assigned crews/teams for the escape room activity. The puzzles in the escape room served to reinforce concepts and details presented in lecture. We held a debrief after the escape room activity to discuss puzzle answers and address any follow-up questions.

Research methods: Learners completed a program evaluation after the activity. These questions assessed the learners' perception of the importance and applicability of the content presented, the escape room format, and what they felt was the most significant and helpful to their practice.

Results: Learners reported enjoying the activity and felt the escape room-based approach allowed for deeper engagement with the topic since the serious nature of child maltreatment can sometimes make this difficult.

Discussion: Pediatric abuse and neglect is a serious and often heavy topic to present to healthcare providers. While we took into consideration that presenting a sensitive topic such as child abuse in an escape room format may be perceived as insensitive or display a lack of insight or respect for the topic, we also understood that the way we built out the clues and puzzles would be important in how the game was perceived by the participants. By building the puzzles to be factual and not overly excessive, we allowed the learners to interact with the information and practice identifying possible cases of abuse and how and when to report suspicions in a manner that did not trivialize the seriousness of the topic or take away from the fact that they were competing in a game. We used a PowerPoint lecture to present the foundation of the content and then lightened the learning session with the use of the escape room activity. The level of competition and comradery lightened the overall mood, and the learners left the class on a high note.

Topics: Child abuse recognition, escape room activity, small-group activity, prehospital, neglect, physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, mandated reporter.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

儿童虐待教育:利用密室逃生活动吸引学习者对一个敏感的话题。
受众:紧急医疗服务(EMS)提供者和其他卫生保健专业人员。仅在2019年,美国就有65.6万名儿童成为虐待和忽视儿童的受害者医学界一直在努力确定虐待儿童。在一项研究中,33%受虐待的儿童曾到医疗服务提供者处就诊,但发现没有受到虐待医疗保健界的许多声音都主张实施常规筛查,研究表明,在急诊科(ED)实施这种筛查增加了对儿童虐待的发现。3-7儿童虐待筛查工具越来越多地用于初级保健和急诊科环境,但尚未适应或设计一种工具,供紧急医疗服务(EMS)专业人员在院前护理环境中普遍使用。由于紧急医疗服务提供者在评估虐待方面具有独特的地位,他们传统上是唯一在家庭环境中与家庭互动的提供者。不幸的是,EMS的虐待记录率相当低。最近的一项研究使用国家紧急医疗服务信息系统数据库来评估EMS记录的≤3岁儿童受虐待的病例与全国已知的虐待发生率相比,发现了近15倍的差异已经有几次尝试阐明EMS提供者报告的困难和障碍。Markenson等人和Tiyyagura等人概述了可能导致缺乏报告的几个方面:关于儿童虐待的继续医学教育(CME)最少,对可疑虐待的身体和历史细节的了解,对儿童发展的了解,在快节奏的工作环境中有限的临床评估时间,对如何与家庭适当互动的理解,以及害怕出错。9,10这个课堂/密室逃生活动是为了直接解决这些问题而开发的。紧急医疗服务提供者参与传统教学(以简短讲座的形式),随后是密室逃生活动,他们在有趣和难忘的环境中进一步探索和加强学习。这项活动还促进了团队合作,在可能复杂和困难的情况下,如涉嫌虐待儿童的情况下,这是一项特别重要的技能。教育目标:在逃脱室结束时,学习者应该能够:1)了解国家和地方虐待儿童的普遍情况;2)了解不同类型的虐待儿童和常见的相关表现;3)了解当地EMS机构的报告要求;4)了解何时就虐待问题作基层医院联系;5)作为一个团队有效地合作。教育方法:儿童虐待是一个敏感而富有挑战性的话题。在这堂课上,我们给学习者一个简短的15分钟的讲座(见密室逃生前讲座ppt),然后是密室逃生活动。逃生室讲座前的ppt包括每张幻灯片上的图像类型和/或统计数据的建议,这些建议可以从您网站上可用的去识别照片和信息中获取。讲座的材料包括国家和地方关于虐待儿童的统计数字、虐待的定义以及帮助确定对虐待的关注的技术。学员可以在讲座结束后自由提问。然后他们被分成指定的小组/小组进行密室逃生活动。密室里的谜题有助于强化课堂上的概念和细节。密室逃生活动结束后,我们进行了汇报,讨论了谜题的答案,并解决了后续问题。研究方法:学员在活动结束后完成项目评估。这些问题评估了学习者对所呈现内容的重要性和适用性的感知,逃脱室格式,以及他们认为对他们的实践最有意义和最有帮助的内容。结果:学习者报告说,他们很喜欢这个活动,并且认为以密室逃生为基础的方法可以让他们更深入地参与这个话题,因为虐待儿童的严重性质有时会使这变得困难。讨论:儿童虐待和忽视是一个严重的,往往沉重的话题,以呈现给医疗保健提供者。虽然我们考虑到以密室逃生的形式呈现儿童虐待等敏感话题可能会被视为不敏感或缺乏洞察力或对主题的尊重,但我们也明白,我们构建线索和谜题的方式对于参与者如何感知游戏非常重要。 通过将谜题设计得真实而不过分,我们允许学习者与信息互动,并练习识别可能的虐待案件,以及如何以及何时报告怀疑,以一种不会轻视话题的严重性或偏离他们在游戏中竞争的事实的方式。我们用ppt的形式来展示课程内容的基础,然后用密室逃生的活动来让学习过程变得轻松。竞争和同志情谊的水平使整个气氛变得轻松,学生们高高兴兴地离开了课堂。主题:儿童虐待识别,逃离房间活动,小组活动,院前,忽视,身体虐待,情感虐待,性虐待,强制记者。
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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