Enablers and Barriers of a Cross-Cultural Geriatric Education Distance Training Programme: The Singapore-Uganda Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Technology
2.4. Study Design
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Benefits of the Cross-Cultural Distance Learning Programme
3.1.1. Impact on the Ugandan Learners and Their Community
3.1.2. Impact on Teachers
“I’m afraid not much (…) because of the short duration we are talking about a 1-h interaction. You kind of say, yah wow I managed to teach or share with somebody half way across the world. But in terms of lasting effect may not be so much because it’s a very short interaction”. (S05)
3.2. Enablers and Barriers to the Programme’s Implementation and Delivery
3.2.1. Impact of Technological Intervention to Facilitate Distance Learning
“Because we had time to ask questions and at the same time, they could hear and answer our questions. I think it was interactive.” (U05)
“So we gather in the class, we gather in the class and then they set up their computer and they allow the speakers and we see the person who is lecturing there on the Skype and we are given registration form and to ask us what we have learnt, what, what and also, they also do a registration on that we follow up whatever the person from Singapore is teaching us. They ask us questions and we answer and also we encourage, and interact the session most of the time. And it is very interesting and then they show us the slides and the topic, they teach us the topics showing us the slides and if possible we can take notes.” (U02)
“I would have preferred training sessions where I can see you, touch you and actually sense the body, the language, the tone, the eye movement and all that leh (sic). Then that connection is definitely better.” (S05) “You don’t get the feel of how your class is. Because a lot of times when you teach something, you kind of have to pitch it to the class and it’s an ongoing thing whether they are getting bored or whether they are listening attentively…(S03)
“You find that with the E-learning, they lack personal touch with the facilitator and some people shy away and they don’t ask questions.” [U01]
“I prefer a workshop style. And ideally what I normally do for ethics right when I deliver eh, ethics teaching I would deliver, I would divide the class up into several groups and then I will give them all a scenario and then each group will discuss. Then after that I will say group 1, what do you’ll think of this scenario. Can you, answer the question—I will give you questions to answer. So what do you think, what are your thought of this particular problem and everybody will share. This is the way I teach, ethics usually. It’s not a lecture style. And how can you do that, on-line over skype. You know how difficult to do that or not?” (S04)
3.2.2. Impact of Cross-Cultural Differences in Teaching and Learning
“Because I thought… to make it relevant to them…, you need to use the drugs that they are familiar with. There’s no point talking about tons about methadone if it’s not available in their country.” (S02)
“I just, I actually just use my usual slides then look for some specific things that are common in Uganda, for example pain, grief, how they do their funeral. Just to understand a little bit more.” (S06)
“The examples are of course okay but we need to do quite a lot as far as our nation is concerned to keep to the standards that tally with the examples you are giving us. We feel those are the actual examples but in a way they are not applicable in our country” (U03)
3.2.3. Impact of Rapport and Familiarity on Implementation and Delivery
“It would have been good if I had over time, had more encounters with them with a good sense of where they are practicing and therefore to (better) tailor (the course) to them.” (S03)
“If let’s say I am the same person who teach them over a series of maybe 4 to 5 weeks, the same group, then I get to know them and they get to know me. We’re a bit more comfortable. That may be easier.” (S06)
3.2.4. Impact of Intrinsic Motivations and External Support on Implementation and Delivery
“We need emotional bonds, need reasons. So if it was somewhere I had really good friends with and I know their struggles then I would probably be more inclined to (continue teaching).” (S02)
“I think you just need the will, you need people who want to do it, you need people who see the need for it.” (S02)
“There has to be a vision that this is what we’re hoping to achieve together. So sustainability is not a question, sustainability is a commitment.” (S06)
I think you just have to appeal to the goodness of his heart, that’s all. It must be out of the goodness of his heart, his charitable spirit lah I guess, to want to do this kind of thing.” (S04)
“As an organization, (…) we create time for capacity building… for those classes.” (U01)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Lesson | Topic | Brief Outline |
---|---|---|
1 | Care for the Older Person | What is ageing and how to care for the aged |
2 | Breaking Bad News & Collusion | Why breaking bad news is painful but necessary, and practical steps on communicating bad news |
3 | Dementia & Cognitive Impairment | Definition, signs and symptoms of dementia, and criteria of diagnosing dementia |
4 | Atypical Presentations in Older Persons | Illness behaviours in the elderly and lessons learnt |
5 | Depression in the Elderly | Signs and symptoms of depression, and how to manage depression in the elderly |
6 | Falls in the Elderly | Importance of falls, causes of falls, basic falls and gait assessment, and how to implement falls prevention strategies |
7 | Ethics in End-of-Life Care | Patient confidentiality, decision making, collusion, medical futility, and tube feeding decisions |
8 | Medication Compliance | Importance of medication compliance, barriers to medication compliance in older persons, forms of medication compliance errors, and how to treat the person and not the disease |
9 | End-of-life Care | What it means to be facing death, what is a “good” death, barriers to good end-of-life care, and role of nurses in providing end-of-life care |
10 | Grief and Bereavement | Process of coping with grief and bereavement, assessment and interventions to cope with grief and bereavement |
11 | Management of Pain | Barriers to pain management, assessment of pain, steps to manage pain, and medication to manage pain |
Appendix B
Topic | Questions |
---|---|
Introduction | 1. How did you get involved in this distance learning/teaching programme between Singapore and Uganda? |
2. What was your involvement in this programme? | |
Distance-learning/teaching experience | 1. What have you learnt through this programme? (e.g., knowledge, skills, attitude, practices) |
2. What are some enjoyable experience being in this programme? | |
3. What have been your challenges? How can they be overcome? | |
4. What do you think are the strengths of distance learning/teaching? | |
5. What are the barriers of distance learning/teaching? How can they be overcome? | |
Culture | 1. What is your knowledge and understanding about Uganda’s/Singapore’s culture? |
2. What do you observe about the class which is different from a class you might teach/attend locally? | |
3. How appropriate was the content and examples of the lecture to the audience? | |
4. What do you think about the teaching style of Singaporean lecturers? What are the strengths and ways to improve it? | |
Geriatric-medicine related (for Ugandan participants) | 1. How would you describe the way you care for your elderly in Uganda? |
2. Do you know how the elderly are cared for in Singapore? | |
Impact evaluation | 1. How has the training impacted your area of work? |
2. To what extent has the distance-teaching program translated into practical outcomes for you as teachers/learners? e.g., practical skills in teaching, make you more culturally sensitive, broaden your perspectives. | |
3. How has your organization been able to use this learning to improve performance? | |
4. To what extent can this program be sustainable? | |
5. What are your future hopes for distance teaching opportunities with developing countries in the near future? |
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1. Impact of Technological Intervention to Facilitate Distance Learning |
Learners were engaged by videoconferencing, which allowed opportunities for interactions. |
Learners were engaged by videoconferencing, which allowed opportunities for interactions. |
Teachers felt that videoconferencing limited interactions such as non-verbal communications. |
2. Impact of Cross-Cultural Differences in Teaching and Learning. |
Teachers emphasized importance of context and culture in teaching. |
Learners adapt teaching contents to their local culture and healthcare landscape. |
3. Impact of Rapport and Familiarity on Implementation and Delivery |
Presence of personal relationship with learners facilitates rapport building. |
Rapport ensures a suitable learning environment for learners. |
Rapport allows teachers to better understand learners’ needs and context. |
Continued relationship between teachers and learners build on the effectiveness of teaching. |
4. Impact of Intrinsic Motivations and External Support on Implementation and Delivery |
Teachers’ intrinsic motivations drive the programme’s implementation and sustainability. |
External incentives may not drive the programme’s implementation and sustainability. |
Teachers’ personal relationships and emotional bonds to learners enhance the programme’s implementation. |
Organisational beliefs and capacity enhance implementation and sustainability of the programme. |
Presence of rapport and relationships within the department or organization enhances the implementation and sustainability of programme. |
Rationale | Step-by-Step Recommendations |
---|---|
1. Align perceptions and expectations between teachers and learners in order to contextualize teaching contents effectively and create an adequate learning environment. | Organize a pre-briefing session for teachers to understand learners’ culture, context and needs. |
Sharing of each country’s cultures may be documented through books or videos for mutual reference. | |
2. Discuss with relevant stakeholders to ensure the relevance of course content and delivery. | Conduct needs assessment or discuss with stakeholders to determine the what is relevant to the local context and culture (teaching content, learning style, etc.). |
3. Incorporate appropriate modes of lesson delivery to enhance interactive sections of the programme. | Separate course delivery into informational and interactive components. |
Provide pre-readings and pre-recorded lectures as alternative ways to deliver information, so that more time can be dedicated for interaction. | |
Provide a platform to allow access to information and provide continuous interactions between teachers and learners. | |
4. Building rapport between teachers and learners is essential for learning and building further engagement over time. | A single teacher can teach multiple series of a lecture. |
Increase the period of interaction and engagement between teachers and students. | |
5. Allow for two-way learning whereby both partners are able to learn from each other. | Create opportunities for mutual learning, such as learners sharing their knowledge with the teachers. |
Learners can share their local constraints, innovations and solutions with teachers. | |
6. Increase the reach of geriatric training programmes to more healthcare workers. | Sensitize and increase the awareness of more healthcare workers to geriatric training programmes. |
Make it compulsory for healthcare staff to attend geriatric training programmes. | |
Incentive based motivation—professional recognition and career development. | |
7. Future operational process. | Increase the lecture time to 1.5 or 2 h. |
Utilize more laptops to allow for smaller group discussions. | |
Utilize alternative platform of tele-teaching such as cloud 9. | |
8. Alternative methods of conducting distance learning programmes. | Continued professional development such as a fellowship programme and study trip to partner countries. |
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Share and Cite
Ha, N.H.L.; Chua, X.Y.; Musimenta, S.; Akankwasa, E.; Pussayapibul, N.; Toh, H.J.; Ginting, M.L.; Samarasekera, D.D.; Tam, W.J.; Yap, P.L.K.; et al. Enablers and Barriers of a Cross-Cultural Geriatric Education Distance Training Programme: The Singapore-Uganda Experience. Geriatrics 2020, 5, 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics5040061
Ha NHL, Chua XY, Musimenta S, Akankwasa E, Pussayapibul N, Toh HJ, Ginting ML, Samarasekera DD, Tam WJ, Yap PLK, et al. Enablers and Barriers of a Cross-Cultural Geriatric Education Distance Training Programme: The Singapore-Uganda Experience. Geriatrics. 2020; 5(4):61. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics5040061
Chicago/Turabian StyleHa, Ngoc Huong Lien, Xin Ying Chua, Shallon Musimenta, Edith Akankwasa, Nongluck Pussayapibul, Hui Jin Toh, Mimaika Luluina Ginting, Dujeepa D. Samarasekera, Wai Jia Tam, Philip Lin Kiat Yap, and et al. 2020. "Enablers and Barriers of a Cross-Cultural Geriatric Education Distance Training Programme: The Singapore-Uganda Experience" Geriatrics 5, no. 4: 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics5040061
APA StyleHa, N. H. L., Chua, X. Y., Musimenta, S., Akankwasa, E., Pussayapibul, N., Toh, H. J., Ginting, M. L., Samarasekera, D. D., Tam, W. J., Yap, P. L. K., & Low, J. A. Y. H. (2020). Enablers and Barriers of a Cross-Cultural Geriatric Education Distance Training Programme: The Singapore-Uganda Experience. Geriatrics, 5(4), 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics5040061