国民彩票

 

Collaborative competition: Health students go for gold as they learn to work together

- October 4, 2013

Health Sciences students work together to complete one of the competition's tasks. (Katherine Wooler photos)
Health Sciences students work together to complete one of the competition's tasks. (Katherine Wooler photos)

Wickwire Field isn鈥檛 the only place you鈥檒l see 国民彩票 teams pulling together.

Last month, The School of Health Sciences encouraged teamwork in health care with the Interprofessional Health Education (IPHE) Championships. It was the second-annual Olympic-style competition, which acts as both a first-year student meet-and-greet and an introduction to the five health disciplines within the school.

A case for holistic care


Barbara MacDonald, faculty member in the School of Health Sciences and third-year advisor, along with Leslie Hill, professor of diagnostic cytology, created the IPHE Championships last year in order to provide a fun and competitive way for first-year students from the five different Bachelor of Health Science disciplines to meet one another.

鈥淲e were looking to do something with the first-year students fairly early on in the fall academic term as a way for students to get to know each other, learn about, from and with one another,鈥 says MacDonald.

The five BHSc disciplines include diagnostic cytology, diagnostic medical ultrasound, nuclear medicine, radiological technology and respiratory therapy. Teams were composed of students from each of the five disciplines who worked together to complete tasks representative of the different health professions.

鈥淚t is imperative for health-care students to realize that effective patient care requires collaboration as an interprofessional team,鈥 says MacDonald. 鈥淪o for our students we thought that this sense of holistic care must start from the beginning.鈥

A competition for future professionals


Faculty representatives from each discipline designed the individual activities for the IHPE Championships, and students raced to beat the clock as they moved from classroom to classroom with a ten-minute time limit in each.

In the nuclear medicine classroom, teams spilt into two groups. One group tackled dressing a team member in the appropriate garb of a radiopharmacy technologist, while the other used a meter to search for five radioactive sources in the room.



For the ultrasound portion of the competition, students were required to identify organs and structures on the ultrasound monitor and count cysts and tumors in a breast phantom. Students played 鈥淚 Spy with my Cytology Eye鈥 for another activity and practiced their diagnostic skills by examining microscope scans for benign forms and abnormalities, while, in radiological technology, teams worked quickly to match bones to x-ray images.

Finally, for the respiratory therapy portion of the competition, teams first labeled respiratory equipment correctly before saving the life of Jake 鈥渢he trache鈥 by setting up an air entrainment mask.

At the medal ceremony following the competition, first-year respiratory therapy student and winning team member Alicia d鈥橢on said the event was a useful exercise.

鈥淲e got to work with others, which is cool because that is what we do in real life.鈥

Collaboration for a cause


The IPHE Championships will not be the last time the