Am J Perinatol 1984; 1(4): 335-340
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1000034
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1984 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

Perinatal Outreach Education

A Continuation Strategy for a Basic ProgramJohn Kattwinkel, George A. Nowacek, Lynn J. Cook, Hallam Hurt, Jerry G. Short
  • Department of Pediatrics, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia
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Publikationsverlauf

Publikationsdatum:
04. März 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

The Perinatal Continuing Education Program consists of a nine-month intervention with community hospital nurses, physicians, and support personnel. Components include a hospital self-inventory of resources, coordination by community hospital staff, a skills workshop, and self-instructional books. This article outlines a follow-up strategy to the basic program and describes changes in community hospital knowledge and care practices that occur between programs.

The follow-up program presented includes a modified coordinators' workshop, identification of updated self-instructional materials for careful study by past participants, and a self-survey of “recommended routines” intended to facilitate change in hospital policies. Otherwise, except for the deletion of the resources inventory, the follow-up program is similar to the basic program.

Testing of participants and detailed review of 1435 hospital charts at sequential time periods revealed a decline in mean knowledge scores between programs, higher scores by new participants before follow-up when compared to pre-basic program, a plateau of patient care quality between programs, and a further improvement in patient care quality after the follow-up program.

We conclude that a follow-up program is best accepted after three years but that timing is not critical. Evaluation measures suggest that new knowledge and care practices become institutionalized as a result of this program and that altered care practices are not simply a result of improved performance by individuals.

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