units

BEH1011

Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences

Monash University

Undergraduate - Unit

This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2013 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.

print version

6 points, SCA Band 2, 0.125 EFTSL

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LevelUndergraduate
FacultyFaculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences
Organisational UnitDepartment of Community Emergency Health and Paramedics
OfferedPeninsula First semester 2013 (Day)
Coordinator(s)Mr George Assimakopoulos

Synopsis

This unit explores the foundation of the paramedic clinician and introduces the roles expected of paramedics as clinicians. The unit will utilise a model of paramedic clinical competence as a framework to develop the foundations and skills of clinical approach, clinical problem solving, and clinical decision-making. The essential clinical skills will be developed in the clinical laboratory and simulation settings. A satisfactory level in all these essential clinical skills will be required before students can proceed with their course. The context of paramedic clinical practice will be provided by supervised clinical experience with emergency ambulance services.

Outcomes

By the completion of this unit, the student will be able to:

  1. Demonstrate a standardised clinical approach to the assessment and care of patients in the community;
  2. Develop and describe communication theories and models of relevance to paramedic practice;
  3. Identify models of communication as they apply to language, interpersonal, non-verbal and intercultural context;
  4. Recognise appropriate professional and teamwork behaviours in the health settings associated with this unit;
  5. Describe the barriers to effective communication and patient assessment within paramedic practice and how emotions and culture can interfere with decision-making;
  6. Reflect on their performance in the clinical setting to identify the internal and external factors influencing clinical decision making;
  7. Demonstrate appropriate professional behaviours and provide peer review within simulated learning environments.
  8. Discuss and demonstrate the appropriate and safe use of manual handling practices and equipment whilst caring for patients.

Assessment

Mid-semester test (1 hour): 20%
Clinical portfolio, hurdle requirement: 30%
Written exam (2 hour): 50%
Objective Structured Clinical Examination (Pass/Fail)

Hurdle requirements: To pass this unit the student must complete the clinical portfolio at the pass grade AND pass the written examination AND pass the Objective Structured Clinical Examination. 80% attendance at tutorials is mandatory to pass this unit.

Chief examiner(s)

Contact hours

6 hours per week involving lectures, tutorials, simulation, clinical laboratory and small group exercises.

Co-requisites

Must be enrolled in Bachelor of Emergency Health (Paramedic) or the Bachelor of
Nursing/Bachelor of Emergency Health (Paramedic)