PAR3033 - Integrated clinical practice - 2019

12 points, SCA Band 2, 0.250 EFTSL

Undergraduate - Unit

Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.

Faculty

Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences

Organisational Unit

Department of Community Emergency Health and Paramedic Practice

Chief examiner(s)

Dr Cameron Gosling

Coordinator(s)

Mr Craig Taylor

Unit guides

Offered

Peninsula

  • Full year 2019 (On-campus)

Prerequisites

PAR2012, PAR2022, PAR2032 and PAR2020

Co-requisites

Must be enrolled in course codes M20021 or M2011

Synopsis

This unit provides the student with the opportunity to integrate knowledge acquired in their study in the primary emergency health care environment. The various tasks allow for the development of advanced skills with a focus on the study of health care within the emergency and community-based primary health care environments to assist in the transition to the workplace.

The unit will review of the graduate attributes needed to be an effective practitioner within the area of primary health care. The unit will focus on the knowledge, skills and values needed to practice as a paramedic. Each student is encouraged to identify their personal strengths, develop effective teamwork, situational awareness and personal skills through a process of reflection and continual improvement. Students will then apply this learning through simulations and actual workplace placements to enhance their role-readiness.

Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this unit, students should be able to:

  1. Critically evaluate the standard paramedic clinical approach to the assessment and care of patients in the community, hospital or other related health setting;
  2. Analyse and appraise the communication techniques utilised to inform, instruct and empower patients to manage their care;
  3. Provide appropriate care for patients at an advanced level within the simulation environment and while under supervision in a range of authentic clinical settings;
  4. Demonstrate appropriate professional, inter-professional and teamwork behaviours within the community and primary health care settings;
  5. Work as an effective team member with fellow paramedics and other health care professionals to provide high level evidence-based patient care;
  6. Demonstrate a culturally sensitive approach to personal reactions and those of patients and their families or carers to acute or chronic illness and or injury;
  7. Critically reflect on performances in the clinical setting to identify the adequacy of personal judgements and the internal and external factors influencing clinical decision making and higher order thinking;
  8. Appraise the care given by peers within simulations and where possible within the authentic environments through public reflection to learn from these actions and inform future practice;
  9. Evaluate the experiences gained within the simulation environment through reflection and judge the influence these may have on future practice within the workplace.

Fieldwork

Throughout the study period each student will complete 32 placement days of eight to ten hours duration.

Assessment

  • 2 x Case studies (1,500 words) (pass/fail) (Hurdle)
  • 2 x Case study presentations (pass/fail)
  • 2 x Simulation self-critiques (1,000 words) (pass/fail)
  • Scenario day attendance (pass/fail) (Hurdle)
  • Clinical placements; 16 x Paramedic, 16 x Hospital (Pass/Fail)(Hurdle)
  • Clinical placement log books (Pass/Fail) (Hurdle)

A pass grade must be achieved on all assessment tasks

Workload requirements

Throughout the study period each student will complete 32 placement days of eight to ten hours duration.

See also Unit timetable information

This unit applies to the following area(s) of study