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Humanising Healthcare: Assessing the impact of an educational resource to share real patient stories with eye care students

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 16:13 authored by Clare Nollett, Barbara Ryan, Keziah Latham

Depression is prevalent in people with low vision and is often not  acknowledged or treated. Eye care practitioners are well placed to  identify suspected depression and refer patients for support. But first,  they need to view this as an appropriate aspect of their role and  receive relevant training. Patients can play an important role in their  education. In this project we invited four individuals with vision  impairment to share their personal stories with eye care students in  short film clips. These were provided to educators alongside written  materials and filmed role plays of screening and referring for  depression to use in their teaching. The impact of the resources on  students was evaluated using pre- and post-use surveys. Educators and  patients also provided feedback. Students experienced an increase in  understanding, knowledge and confidence around addressing depression.  They reported an increased appreciation of the patient perspective and  would be more likely to communicate about mental health in future.  Educators felt more confident in teaching students about depression and  patients felt more able to talk to others about the psychological impact  of vision loss. Sharing real patient stories via film clips proved a  useful way of educating eye care students about depression. 

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Publication title

British Journal of Visual Impairment

ISSN

0264-6196

Publisher

SAGE Publications

File version

  • Published version

Item sub-type

Article

Affiliated with

  • School of Psychology and Sport Science Outputs