Improving healthcare student experience of clinical placements

There is an expanding workforce gap in the NHS. Alongside national programmes to train, recruit and retain staff, efforts are needed on a local level. Clinical placements can make up to a third of healthcare student’s time while at university thus placement experience is an important factor to reduc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hayley Trueman, Esther Rowland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2024-03-01
Series:BMJ Open Quality
Online Access:https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/13/1/e002504.full
Description
Summary:There is an expanding workforce gap in the NHS. Alongside national programmes to train, recruit and retain staff, efforts are needed on a local level. Clinical placements can make up to a third of healthcare student’s time while at university thus placement experience is an important factor to reducing attrition rates at universities and increase conversion rates from student to qualified professional. This quality improvement project aimed to increase reported rates of students’ satisfaction to 100% for each item of the student experience survey by March 2024 within Berkshire Healthcare National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust.To gain a deeper understanding of the experience and problems within healthcare student clinical placements interviews of students and staff were conducted alongside a literature review, which revealed six key themes around student placement experience: belonging and acceptance, familiarity and continuity, confidence and competence, preparation and preparedness, supervision and support, feeling overwhelmed/stress/impact on social and emotional health. These themes were translated into a student experience survey to achieve baseline and subsequent measurements.Changes were introduced to improve student satisfaction with clinical placements based on the baseline data of student satisfaction reported in the first student experience survey. Changes included introducing student inductions, better access to IT, student induction packs and newsletters. While the quantitative measurements of the items on the student experience survey remained positive, the nature of the qualitative feedback reflected the impact of the changes. Additionally, the improved communication and collaboration across teams because of the process highlighted the need for clear streamlined administrative processes. Regular review of student feedback has enabled timely feedback processes to placements and visible follow-up for students, highlighting the investment in them as the future workforce.
ISSN:2399-6641